Can we not analyze all things we call the good in life in the same way? As not being genuinely good in themselves but rather as some combination of a reduction or cessation in suffering/dissatisfaction/lack...
Do you agree with this (admittedly) bleak view? Why/why not? — Inyenzi
I tend to see the picture as far more bleak, siding with the views of various Buddhists, Arthur Schopenhauer, Hegesias, etc. In that suffering is what is positively bad, whereas pleasure exists only as a reduction or cessation of some suffering, pain, lack, dissatisfaction or another. Suffering are sensations that are unwanted - they are afflictions. The hedonic value of pleasure is nothing over and above the removal of these afflictions. There is nothing extra. — Inyenzi
It's quite sobering how close all humanity is to starvation, and how real and genuine our need to eat is. Driven by these painful sensations that arise when we lack calories and nutrition, we seek out and ingest food, which temporarily reduces or negates these sensations. By consequence we maintain biological homeostasis, and the process repeats. Eating today, so that we may feel hunger again tomorrow. — Inyenzi
Do you agree with this (admittedly) bleak view? Why/why not? — Inyenzi
So, if I recall correctly Schopenhauer never advocated masking suffering with pleasure. He was for the idea of reducing suffering, not increasing pleasure. Not sure if this is pertinent, just wanted to point that out. — Wallows
Happiness is of a negative rather than positive nature, and for this reason cannot give lasting satisfaction and gratification, but rather only ever a release from a pain or lack, which must be followed either by a new pain or by languor, empty yearning and boredom. — Schophenaur
I know of no greater absurdity than that propounded by most systems of philosophy in declaring evil to be negative in its character. Evil is just what is positive; it makes its own existence felt. Leibnitz is particularly concerned to defend this absurdity; and he seeks to strengthen his position by using a palpable and paltry sophism. It is the good which is negative; in other words, happiness and satisfaction always imply some desire fulfilled, some state of pain brought to an end. — Schophenaur
However, Locke continues, pleasure is an impermanent reward for the satiation of desires. True happiness arises from acting for the greater good. — ernestm
1. Pleasure is a drug
2. Medicine is bitter
What do you make of that? — TheMadFool
Yeah, pretty much everything you said is in those two quotes. Ta-da! — Wallows
So the purpose of this thread is to try and get a discussion started on whether this view on pleasure (found also in the thought of the Buddhists, Arthur Schophenauer, Locke, Hegesias, etc) is correct. And in a wider sense, how we should respond if so. If the good of our existence is not found in chasing pleasure, satisfying desires, fulfilling our needs, then where is it found? How should we then choose to find value in our lives? — Inyenzi
Perhaps the good of our existence is found in chasing awareness and interconnectedness, and in fulfilling the overall potential of the universe. We should then choose to find value in the way our lives intertwine with everything else, and how our own potential is broadened in the awareness and fulfilment of a universal potentiality: the capacity to develop, achieve or succeed as a whole. — Possibility
I agree with these themes. Due to pleasure only existing in relation some suffering or desire being negated, it cannot given as that which gives life its value or meaning. If one agrees with the outline of pleasure in the this thread, and also takes a hedonic view on the good in life, then the conclusion would be reached that the highest good belongs to the dead (which is essentially the view of the Buddhists). — Inyenzi
And in a wider sense, how we should respond if so. — Inyenzi
If the good of our existence is not found in chasing pleasure, satisfying desires, fulfilling our needs, then where is it found? — Inyenzi
How should we then choose to find value in our lives? — Inyenzi
Everything up to "the capacity to develop, achieve or succeed as a whole".
At this point, if everyone had proceeded into their "own potential [...] broadened in the awareness and fulfilment of a universal potentiality", then bellum omnium contra omnes would be a paradise-in-the-flesh. — Merkwurdichliebe
There is an everyday view of suffering and pleasure that sees suffering as being positively negative, — Inyenzi
Can we not analyze all things we call the good in life in the same way? As not being genuinely good in themselves but rather as some combination of a reduction or cessation in suffering/dissatisfaction/lack, a drive satisfied, or an experience of selflessness where ones subject-object relation to the world dissolves within the experience (eg, loss of self within the orgasm sensation). After all, we call a film 'good' based on the degree that one was immersed and absorbed within it, forgetting oneself. Likewise with music, sex, conversation. Put simply (in terms of the hedonic value of our lives) there is only suffering and its negation, in some form or another.
Do you agree with this (admittedly) bleak view? Why/why not? — Inyenzi
There is very much the utilitarian calculus of whether life is worth these six goods. If someone said, that all the neutral/negative states that are necessary to maintain these six intrinsic good states, are the cost of the six intrinsic goods, would you feel that it is worth it? — schopenhauer1
There is very much the utilitarian calculus of whether life is worth these six goods. If someone said, that all the neutral/negative states that are necessary to maintain these six intrinsic good states, are the cost of the six intrinsic goods, would you feel that it is worth it? — schopenhauer1
So it's not that the hedonic view of ones life is wrong in-itself, rather it's that the view arises from a life lacking in meaning and purpose, pervaded by suffering. One doesn't argue against the hedonic view of lifes worth, but instead dissolves it by rectifying the causes (i.e. getting up in meaningful pursuits, aims, connections to others). The problem is the existential crisis prevents this - no aims are seen as genuinely worthwhile, no connections are viewed to be truly meaningful, none of the ends in this world make the suffering worth it. But, you don't cure this worldview through seeing life as a bucket of pleasurable experiences and a bucket of bad ones. — Inyenzi
I see you saying that life is mainly about the meaning one gets from it through roles in society or esteem from a role in society. That can be added maybe as another category, I'll grant that. However, it is not really saying much more than there is more intrinsic positive goods you can add to the equation, not that the hedonic view is wrong itself. Perspective can be simply part of the hedonic equation.
But you answered the question in the negative- no, the goods are not worth the negatives in purely hedonic terms. I'm adding "meaning through perspective" in hedonic terms. How else would you answer then? — schopenhauer1
Humans have a natural stance to fear death and fear the pain of death- that whole suicide trope is not a very good argument. — schopenhauer1
And it is only when one is in a state of not being caught up in their day to day existence that these questions even arise. And so perhaps we can view antinatlist thought as nothing more than a symptom of some sort of deficiency, some sort of lack of engagement or involvement in living. The antitnatalist is in a sense, "stepping back" from actually living his or her life, and instead focuses on a broad overall perspective of life in general (be it, his personal autobiography, or the entirety of the human project, or perhaps the entirety of a material universe). The suggestion here is that perhaps it is only when the way in which one is living fails to engage oneself with the world does this "stepping back" (as a prerequisite for antinatalist thought and conclusion) even take place. Under this outline, antinatalists are just ill in a sense, with the cure being to live in such a way that one is engaged in the world again, where this "stepping back" in perspective doesn't arise. To lose oneself in living again. — Inyenzi
There is an everyday view of suffering and pleasure that sees suffering as being positively negative, and pleasure as being positively good. — Inyenzi
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