This does not change the fact that torture can occur beyond human interaction. — darthbarracuda
Yes, indeed if I had the choice I don't think I would condone abiogenesis. — darthbarracuda
Only if you change torture's definition. — apokrisis
Let me know when you are ready to deal with nature in terms of what is natural rather than imagining yourself sitting at God's right hand, tugging his sleeve as He is doing his creating, and murmuring: "Do you really think this last little DNA thing is wise?". — apokrisis
Could it get any more laughable? — apokrisis
I don't know, you're setting the precedent here. I mean, we can a more cordial discussion, or we can descend into useless name-calling. — darthbarracuda
The core issue seems to be that you treat phenomenology as brute fact - we can't help what we feel - whereas I say scientific naturalism supports the position that what we feel is controllable on many levels. So if a feeling is a problem, it is also a problem that can be tackled. Or at least solution seeking becomes the first natural response. — apokrisis
So we have two quite different metaphysics in play. And where I lose patience is when you claim that your ontology is also founded on scientific naturalism. Just be honest. It is not. — apokrisis
Pain is a bad thing because it can grow to any scale and become the worst thing in existence. So even the most marginal forms of pain - like unease or boredom - need to be banished too. Hence your continual resort to slippery slope argumentation. One minute we are suffering a papercut or aching neck, the next thing we know, it is going to be genital electrodes and the Holocaust. — apokrisis
You have avoided dealing with my arguments against your simple-minded phenomenalism. It is basic to my position that phenomenology - as an introspective level of awareness - is a socially constructed linguistic habit. And all you say in reply is that you can't see the point in talking about social constructionism (as it is indeed "pointless" in within your mind-stuff paradigm). — apokrisis
So your position relies on a number of socially constructed delusions. The obviousness of that is why one would ask what it is exactly that you are psychologically shielding yourself from? — apokrisis
such problems are existential, i.e. structurally unremovable from life, i.e. a necessary condition for life as we know it. — darthbarracuda
Deconstructing our experiences doesn't just dissolve them away. — darthbarracuda
I ask how you can talk about "life" when you don't even seem to believe in life's naturalism in this regard. The logic of your position requires you to argue that life is unnatural in some deep fashion. I'm waiting for you to resolve that paradox. — apokrisis
My argument is that we would be simply replacing one construction with another in switching out your ridiculously negative construction for a more balanced view of existence. — apokrisis
What would this "balanced" view consist of? Certainly we can't just magically think away our pains and fears. — darthbarracuda
Indeed this was kind of the point of this thread to begin with. From a phenomenological perspective, we don't seem to belong. We're aliens to the world. We're able to self-reflect. Existentialism 101. How the hell is the universe even capable of hosting something like us? — darthbarracuda
You can see this applied in psychology by learning about Terror Management Theory and the psychoanalytic/humanistic theories of Rank and Becker. — darthbarracuda
I've answered all this already. So you are simply returning me to your assertions rather than dealing with my arguments against them. — apokrisis
The question then is what metaphysically is the correct way to respond - responding in terms of notions of souls and other traditional social mythology not being a very naturalistic/scientific way of framing the issues. — apokrisis
So again, we are back to the same situation. I defend a naturalistic/scientific ontology. You seem to take the other road - the romantic, dualistic, idealistic path. For you, the organic whole that is the world is divided ontically into brute material objects and sensuous being. And from that broken duality, all kinds of confusion flows. — apokrisis
None of what I have written depends on a dualistic notion of anything aside from the identification of powerful phenomenological experiences that cannot be dissolved under investigation, which is more in line with idealism than anything else. — darthbarracuda
Honestly whenever anyone argues against you you always either pull the science™ card or the dualism card without explaining anything else.... — darthbarracuda
Your holism ignores the specifics in favor of a global analysis. When in reality phenomenologically consciousness is it's own universe in itself, regardless of what contingency factors exist in the environment in which it presides. — darthbarracuda
If your unrevealed scientific arguments are good enough to diffuse my own, then you wouldn't have to result to clearly unscientific arguments handwaves like "stop being childish" or "stop exaggerating". Instead you have participated in these handwaves and thus your critique of my argument as being unscientific (which it's not) applies to your own argument as well. — darthbarracuda
That's silly because instead I have pointed out that the phenomenology - particular feelings - are shaped or individuated within a socio-cultural, and a biological, context.
So my approach is not just contextual in a way that connects the world and the ideas. It recognises the different levels on which this is happening - the biological and the social - as well as then talking about the further fact of their integration. — apokrisis
Alternatively, you actually are parroting childish and exaggerated "philosophy" here. And you talk past any science I mention rather than answering it. — apokrisis
...except when you start to argue that the overall holistic context can replace the immediate specificity of immanent objectivity, thus somehow "disproving" my pessimism by ignoring phenomenology entirely. — darthbarracuda
The biological and social context challenges that phenomenology in a basic way. Even pain can be pleasure as any masochist knows. — apokrisis
So the counter-argument is that your pessimism is based on a particular social construction - a negative habit of thought which you have mastered to the extent it seems completely real and undeniable to you. — apokrisis
Are you willing even to consider that you are the victim of this kind of self-delusion? How are you going to demonstrate that you are not? — apokrisis
This is hardly a challenge, as you have ignored the point I made several times about how pain is not equivalent to suffering. — darthbarracuda
My pessimism isn't comfortable, nor does it feel natural ... when I am in a relatively serene state I usually end up wondering what made me forget about all the bad. — darthbarracuda
As soon as you realize just how endemic Pollyannism and magical thinking is, you become disillusioned with the concept of happiness and security and realize that they're built on a throne of lies and concealment. — darthbarracuda
I will need to have a good reason to believe that I am self-deluded, otherwise it's: — darthbarracuda
That's instrumentality right there and anyone of any moral worth, I think, ought to find it repugnant. — darthbarracuda
So define suffering for me - in a way that doesn't include everything (like being tickled, vaguely bored or uneasy, laughing until it hurts, satiated until its uncomfortable, etc). — apokrisis
And also define pain for me - in a way that is different from your usual claim that it represents suffering of the worst kind, and hence the most important suffering to mention (as in torture, being left trapped in a car wreck, etc). — apokrisis
You should have been a Christian monk. You would have loved the hair shirt and flagellation. God forbid that you might have a positive outlook on life here among all us unholy sinners. — apokrisis
So the worst that could happen is that you might have hope and that you would end up disappointed all over again?
Yeah. I can understand why that is a risk not to be endured, a fate ten times worse than remaining convinced that a life in a hair shirt, scourge in hand, is best preparation for a likely horrible death. — apokrisis
Are you telling me to lie to myself? What happened to Diogenes' "truth above all else"? — darthbarracuda
Did I tell you to lie to yourself or did I say stop presuming that you own the truth? — apokrisis
Every papercut turns into the Holocaust with you. — apokrisis
Yes, you can certainly make a case that there is a socially constructed fear of death because there is also the precondition of a socially constructed sense of self. Culture must react in some way to the sharpness of failing to exist, after leading to a sharp notion of being a self in existence (in a soul-like fashion). — apokrisis
This is silly. Have you considered that you are deluded? Both of us have our beliefs and questioning the foundations of them is going to have to be through rational discussion and not skepticism of our honesty. — darthbarracuda
I was first exposed to this view via Schopenhauer, but I don't think it's an accurate conception of pleasure. True, pleasure includes the cessation of pain. But when I first fell in love (and it was reciprocated), this earth became a paradise for me. (It's still good and still her, but there's nothing like the beginning. Things become warm and comfortable.)Then of course there is the combination of friends, drugs, music. I've been so "blissed-out" that I didn't even want to speak. Words were cups too small. Paintings of Christ making that hand-sign come to mind. There's just no way I could begin to describe this as mere cessation of pain. And then there are especially good sexual encounters that again one wouldn't dream of reducing to cessation of pain. True, we need some hunger to enjoy food and some lust to enjoy sex, but even this hunger/lust is mixed (if life is going well) with the anticipation of its joyous consummation. Finally there are philosophical pleasures. Great new ideas are like love affairs of the mind. Conceptual revolutions are like falling in love. You assimilate them, take them for granted, and then find a new revolution. These are peak experiences, hardly available upon demand or without risk. But they help me make my case that pleasure is not just relief. I can't know what intensities you've had access to. But I insist that 'spirituality' is largely a matter of the heart and therefore of experience which alters the sense of what is possible. ( I must admit that I have been lucky. I wasn't born to a rich or educated family, but I was given (by 'the gods' or chance) decent looks, great health, talent. I really can't know the pain/pleasure ratio of others. I just know that I got better at finding pleasure and dodging pain, and that much of this was an adjustment of ideology, slowly and painfully achieved. )What I was trying to say before is that I think most of what we consider to be enjoyable or pleasurable moments are actually just a reaction to a need or a desire: the relief of anxiety, or suffering-in-disguise. — darthbarracuda
And this is where I will disagree with your own views Schop1 on deprivation. — darthbarracuda
his applies even to our quest for meaning - what meaning we do derive from our lives seems to be fundamentally reactionary. Tragedy leads to meaning. — darthbarracuda
Depressive states are perhaps sustained in a mind seduced by such an image. (This is not to say that there is something other than seduction by images when it comes to grand judgments about life as a whole.)In depressive states, the mind may be seen in the image of such an antler, in all its fantastic splendour pinning its bearer to the ground. — Zappfe
Is the alternative of filtering and selection supposed to be truth rather than chaos? Much thinking is unconscious. I believe that. But how is this mass of unconscious thinking the truth rather than the background? Repression is used in a sly, pejorative way, as if there were something to recommend the alternative.It performs, to extend a settled phrase, a more or less self-conscious repression of its damaging surplus of consciousness. This process is virtually constant during our waking and active hours, and is a requirement of social adaptability and of everything commonly referred to as healthy and normal living. — Zappfe
This is structure itself, unequal forces in collision, temporary stability. These 'repressional mechanisms' are (in the human sphere) tools for the achievement of purpose. Don't lie. Don't steal. It's better for most of us if most of us don't. Don't text and drive. Focus. Etc.The whole of living that we see before our eyes today is from inmost to outmost enmeshed in repressional mechanisms, social and individual; they can be traced right into the tritest formulas of everyday life. — Zappfe
So are adults living without illusions, or not? If so, what is Zappfe bringing? Is he not also trying to paint adults as such children?In everyday interaction, isolation is manifested in a general code of mutual silence: primarily toward children, so these are not at once scared senseless by the life they have just begun, but retain their illusions until they can afford to lose them. In return, children are not to bother the adults with untimely reminders of sex, toilet, or death. Among adults there are the rules of ‘tact,’ the mechanism being openly displayed when a man who weeps on the street is removed with police assistance. — Zappfe
Easy to agree here. And I find it easy to see Zappfe as the salesman of one more anchoring (pessimism), one that I began to resent and finally took pleasure in burying.We love the anchorings for saving us, but also hate them for limiting our sense of freedom. Whenever we feel strong enough, we thus take pleasure in going together to bury an expired value in style. — Zappfe
The object was the goal. Then a new object becomes the goal. So we can posit a goal archetype. But sometimes the goal is the sandwich we can make downstairs. We can also make living on this gradient a goal, aware that permanent satisfaction in a given object is not to be expected. No goal is central (all is vanity) but a life with many goals and attainments is good --or can be good.Nothing finite satisfies at length, one is ever proceeding, gathering knowledge, making a career. The phenomenon is known as ‘yearning’ or ‘transcendental tendency.’ Whenever a goal is reached, the yearning moves on; hence its object is not the goal, but the very attainment of it – the gradient, not the absolute height, of the curve representing one’s life. — Zappfe
This is more than a 'remedy against panic' in my view. Indeed, I prefer to see panic in terms of a clash of hero myths. When aren't we posing as heroes in a drama? This "rareness" is maybe just Zappfe being oblivious to the fact that most are consumers of personalities largely constructed by others (like Zappfe, for instance). The anxiety of influence is rare, but that's because not everyone casts themselves as a truly original personality potentially worth imitating/assimilating. We heroisms of humility and altruism that often work against posing as unique or beyond the law or...etc.The fourth remedy against panic, sublimation, is a matter of transformation rather than repression. Through stylistic or artistic gifts can the very pain of living at times be converted into valuable experiences. Positive impulses engage the evil and put it to their own ends, fastening onto its pictorial, dramatic, heroic, lyric or even comic aspects.
The present essay is a typical attempt at sublimation. The author does not suffer, he is filling pages and is going to be published in a journal.
The ‘martyrdom’ of lonely ladies also shows a kind of sublimation – they gain in significance thereby.
Nevertheless, sublimation appears to be the rarest of the protective means mentioned here. — Zappfe
This guy is the anti-Nietzsche, isn't he? This is the same mania of Thus Spake Zarathustra. It's (to me) nakedly a grandiose religious conception. It's the sort of thing Nietzsche suspected was hiding in the "great sages," but here it is proclaimed boldly, the religion of anti-life, anti-earth, and not in the name of some better place or better principle. In the name of nothingness, right? And yet it takes a pleasure in speaking itself, a pleasure in the existence of midwives to offend. It needs the very 'problem' it wants to diagnose and cure. Zappfe climbed his mountains. Schop. played his flute. They wore their dark views like a smart new jacket from the local H & M. I won't hypocritically curse them for this. That's just the way it is. It's fun to play dress-up. Life as endless play, however edgy and grim...Then will appear the man who, as the first of all, has dared strip his soul naked and submit it alive to the outmost thought of the lineage, the very idea of doom. A man who has fathomed life and its cosmic ground, and whose pain is the Earth’s collective pain. With what furious screams shall not mobs of all nations cry out for his thousandfold death, when like a cloth his voice encloses the globe, and the strange message has resounded for the first and last time:
“– The life of the worlds is a roaring river, but Earth’s is a pond and a backwater.
– The sign of doom is written on your brows – how long will ye kick against the pin-pricks?
– But there is one conquest and one crown, one redemption and one solution.
– Know yourselves – be infertile and let the earth be silent after ye.”
And when he has spoken, they will pour themselves over him, led by the pacifier makers and the midwives, and bury him in their fingernails.
He is the last Messiah. As son from father, he stems from the archer by the waterhole. — Zappfe
Nothing was ever in tune. People just blindly grabbed at whatever there was: communism, health foods, zen, surfing, ballet, hypnotism, group encounters, orgies, biking, herbs, Catholicism, weight-lifting, travel, withdrawal, vegetarianism, India, painting, writing, sculpting, composing, conducting, backpacking, yoga, copulating, gambling, drinking, hanging around, frozen yogurt, Beethoven, Back, Buddha, Christ, TM, H, carrot juice, suicide, handmade suits, jet travel, New York City, and then it all evaporated and fell apart. People had to find things to do while waiting to die. I guess it was nice to have a choice. — Bukowski
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