I once met a childhood trauma specialist who had become an alcoholic and sex addict. He didn't make the connection for a while. Traumatized in childhood, obsessed with trauma. It didn't click. But he was fucked up and he knew that. He wasn't just a sex addict. He had a specific fetish -married women. What got him going was knowing they were drawn to him (avatar of the abyss) in favor of their beau. There's a thesis to be written on the relation between violation and pessimism.
I wonder to what extent something like this subtends the whole pessimistic approach. — csalisbury
I often think about that guy and how he ended his relationships with the women whose lives he ruptured and how he made sense of that. David Foster Wallace did a story on this in Brief Interviews with Hideous Men - maybe the presence of the destroying force was necessary to educate the destroyed. Who knows? — csalisbury
What happens before the crisis is you have certain ideas about how and why to live. The crisis burns them all away. Whatever is left after is what's valuable. The only thing that helps in my opinion is that it's necessary, and that it passes. — csalisbury
You can't know why it's necessary or what it's doing until after, so no peptalk and positive talk will help. But it does pass. If it's really really really impossibly bad, you're getting close to the release, and you have to just hold on. — csalisbury
The difficulty is that, in ontophobia, you can't access the quality, for lack of a better word, of ontophilic space. You can only see it conceptually as something opposed to the ontophobic. So it has no fullness, or reality of its own. — csalisbury
In my philosophy book where I coined those terms ontophilia and ontophobia, I do say that I think ontophilia is the referent of theologically noncognitivist conceptions of God. Also nirvana, eudaimonia, ataraxia, etc.
The latter terms are less problematic because they are explicitly about a state of mind, while “God” sounds like you’re talking about something outside your mind, which is causing those feelings, rather than just talking about the feelings. — Pfhorrest
Is it safe to say in a completely deterministic universe that there is even 'self' in which one can choose to harm? If the the thinking thing or "I" as defined in "I think therefore I am", isn't even real as we define it but instead merely part of the plethora of other things that exists outside which simultaneously die and come to life every day of our lives, then one's own death is pretty much moot in a deterministic universe other than the moral, social, and psychological ramifications we give it. And if someone finds out that that they are merely one of many redundant cogs in a very large machine that it can be difficult to justify such beliefs or illusions depending on how they view it.On face value I surmise that this makes sense. But, the issue is that suicide, even in a deterministic universe is still self-harm. You can't really get around this fact. — Wallows
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.