My point, however, is Schopenhauer’s seeks to maintain restlessness — TheWillowOfDarkness
It is incapable offering people philosophical understanding which mutes or resolves anxiety about what happens next in life. — TheWillowOfDarkness
it fails to accept suffering — TheWillowOfDarkness
It misunderstands Will, mistaking it for something to calm, when it is actually needs eliminating entirely. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Many other times though, it just makes someone bored, resisted or frustrated- an action which generates Will- as it denies the goal that have, meaning the go into “seeking mode” as they need to find it again — TheWillowOfDarkness
Schopenhauer would concur. But the will cannot be eliminated by force, by means of its own objectifications. It requires being blown out, like a candle, from within, as a completely free choice. — Thorongil
He never says eliminating suffering is easygoing. But there is an inner, ineradicable calm, even in the midst of great suffering or boredom, by those who have tasted the denial of the will, which enables them to overcome the blows of life battering them from without. — Thorongil
Within his understanding of suffering, he is still treating it as if it is something which can be captured and fought, something with which people "cope with." — TheWillowOfDarkness
One has nothing to do. They just are. Will demands nothing of them, no matter what they might be doing in a moment, for there is none. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The way his philosophy handles Will is to try and force it out by means of its own objections. In doing so he considers this the means to eliminate Will — TheWillowOfDarkness
complaining. — darthbarracuda
Can you elucidate the differences in the sophomoric complaining of the temperament vs. philosophical pessimism? — schopenhauer1
Also you had some posts a while back on exustential boredom or something of that sort. — schopenhauer1
How do I not know[...]you are just not trolling? — schopenhauer1
And what - you're saying this is a state of boredom? Is that what you think he fails to understand? If so, then you have misunderstood what the denial of the will entails. The ego, as a mere phantasm of the will, dissolves when the will is dissolved, so there is no one to be bored, no one to suffer while the will is being denied. — Thorongil
How does one acquire this knowledge? The simplest, most common, and most tragic way is through suffering, which either over time or through some particularly excruciating event, slowly erodes, chips away at, or detonates the inborn error that we exist to be happy (having our desires be fulfilled) and that one need only affirm one's will to be so. Then a set of choices presents itself: 1) denial of the realization, resulting in the strengthening of the delusion, 2) suicide, or 3) the path of asceticism. — Thorongil
I'm not entirely sure he would say this, but even if he did, I'm very curious as to what difference it makes. Basically, the full import of your criticism, which has been put so forcefully, is still lost on me. — Thorongil
He fails to describe such a state and, as a consequence, his philosophy fails to pass on knowledge of what it entails. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Acquiring knowledge doesn't define the absence of Will. Someone could know everything yet still miss out on the critical change in their own outlook which is the denial of Will. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Schopenhauer might know Will cannot be eliminated by the Will, but he nevertheless argues it must be and offers that as THE solution to restlessness. — TheWillowOfDarkness
He might say what required (the elimination of Will), but he neither shows it nor practices it within his own philosophy. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The difference it makes in whether or not suffering is recognised for what it is: something which cannot be "fixed," which cannot be "muted," which is not "coped" with under any circumstance. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Instead of accepting suffering for what it is — TheWillowOfDarkness
Schopenhauer imagines we must fight ourselves (e.g. suffering) from within ourselves (e.g. turn suffering into non-suffering), as if we could Will the elimination of Will and were not bound to the identity of ourselves at a given time. — TheWillowOfDarkness
What the deuce does this even mean? I think Schopenhauer does damn fine job of accepting suffering for it is, i.e. something intrinsically undesirable as an end in itself. What else do you have in mind here? — Thorongil
To know the world is full of suffering or that Will cannot eliminate itself doesn’t constitute the non-existence of Will. — TheWillowOfDarkness
People need more than “profound knowledge” to be without Will. — TheWillowOfDarkness
“Mysticism,” in so far as we are talking about it here (e.g. "rapture," "ecstasy," "illumination," or "union" ) is the confusion of THE WORLD (e.g. the state of ourselves which, in Spinozian terms, is our “Love of God” ) for metaphysics, such that people consider themselves to be defined by Will: as if there person is defined by some logical, metaphysical precept (God, PSR,etc.etc), as opposed to themselves as a state of the world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The absence of Will is actually the affirmation of oneself — TheWillowOfDarkness
He limits our descriptions of the world and Will to metaphysics and so misses out on detailing so much knowledge, even to the point of suggesting it is impossible. — TheWillowOfDarkness
as if people must do these things to understand the nature of life and avoid existing with the restlessness of Will. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Reaching these goals, he argues, must be achieved through specific practices — TheWillowOfDarkness
despite the fact it isn’t true at all — TheWillowOfDarkness
he completely fails to describe what it takes to live without Will and advocate people hold beliefs which fail to describe such a life. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Something undesirable that CANNOT be escaped, altered or fought. If suffering is to be avoided, it must not exist. There is no struggle to turn suffering into the absence of suffering. When suffering is present, it is a state of the world we are powerless to change. — TheWillowOfDarkness
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