The point I'm making is that understanding such lifecycles does not help prevent them at all. — Agustino
You think technology can overstep man's morality. But it can't. — Agustino
Too much good and people lose motivation. — Agustino
The Roman Empire didn't disappear because of natural disaster and pandemic - it disappeared due to internal reasons. Internally it became unstable. Why? Because of depravation and loss of moral values - loss of the virtues. — Agustino
Except that pandemics and the like aren't the biggest danger. The biggest danger is within man's own heart. — Agustino
I think people are actually more dumb than ever before on average. Sure, they have more knowledge than ever before, but certainly not more intelligence - too much comfort dulls down their intelligence, and all that is left is mere knowledge. — Agustino
:-} To say it is yet to be empirically tested is to misunderstand it. It cannot be empirically tested, because every new society that comes up will still be puffed up by this self-belief and this delusion that it really is different than all those that went before it. All it takes is one sufficiently bad leader/administration and things will be over - for any civilisation.So your sweeping claim is yet to be empirically tested. — apokrisis
Right - so if human beings statistically have a tendency towards immorality, that means that given technology, their immorality will have much greater consequences now than ever before, because it too will be amplified. This pretty much suggests that we're going to end all of human civilisation in nuclear war.Technology is a tool for amplifying human action. — apokrisis
I'm not against naturalism - I fail to see how naturalism would fail to note the inability to alter man's character, and if man's character is a large driving factor for his actions, and man is naturally predisposed or has a tendency towards immorality, and technology amplifies man's actions, it kind of only follows that things are going to get worse quite quickly.I know it is your thing to play the conservative. But again, I have outlined the grounds on which I am founding a view. It is the one supported by science and philosophical naturalism. So just repeating your own paradigmatic assumptions in reply is otiose. — apokrisis
Not only this. If you read accounts of the fall of Rome from historical sources you will see a multitude of factors among which loss of discipline, and loss of motivation which permitted them to be defeat by barbarians.Anthropological bollocks. It over-ran its ability to control an empire. It ran out of new grain fields to occupy.
So it had a brilliant social formula - for its time. But then fell apart because it over-ran what its hierarchical organisation could contain.
So it arose on things like speed of communication, coherence of action. And fell apart after the social technologies involved could no longer cope with the scale of the task. — apokrisis
Sure, so?But you are arguing from your own personal vague definitions of intellect and morality. As a naturalist, I aim higher. If nature is in fact intelligible, these are things we can properly define and measure. They are not just matters of opinion. — apokrisis
If you're referring to Guns, Germs and Steel, I've read it and I'm not impressed. My reading of history shows that these weren't the main factors. The main factors were always social - in the evolving social mentalities. Baghdad at the height of the Islamic golden age lost its virtues - people became like today - many academics, many scientists, lots of musicians, a flowering and promiscuous culture, loss of motivation amongst the youth, a very extensive compassion, an anti-military hippie kinda culture etc. Then it collapsed.All earlier examples of social collapse (as evidenced for example by Jared Diamond) were societies that didn't understand their natural basis sufficiently. — apokrisis
All it takes is one sufficiently bad leader/administration and things will be over - for any civilisation. — Agustino
Right - so if human beings statistically have a tendency towards immorality, that means that given technology, their immorality will have much greater consequences now than ever before, because it too will be amplified. This pretty much suggests that we're going to end all of human civilisation in nuclear war. — Agustino
I fail to see how naturalism would fail to note the inability to alter man's character, — Agustino
Not only this. If you read accounts of the fall of Rome from historical sources you will see a multitude of factors among which loss of discipline, and loss of motivation which permitted them to be defeat by barbarians. — Agustino
If you're referring to Guns, Germs and Steel, I've read it and I'm not impressed. My reading of history shows that these weren't the main factors. The main factors were always social - in the evolving social mentalities. Baghdad at the height of the Islamic golden age lost its virtues - people became like today - many academics, many scientists, lots of musicians, a flowering and promiscuous culture, loss of motivation amongst the youth, a very extensive compassion, an anti-military hippie kinda culture etc. Then it collapsed. — Agustino
You must like being coy, because you have continually refused to give me concrete examples of what they did wrong, what they ought to have done, and why. — Thorongil
2) These figures, or at least Schopenhauer, would say that the problem CANNOT be solved, outside of abstaining from procreation. This is part of what makes them pessimists. — Thorongil
Yes, you're a hypocrite. Think of all the drowning children you could have saved if you slept on a rock and used the money for that Target pillow on them. — Thorongil
A good deed, but in the grand scheme of things it did absolutely nothing, as is the case of all forms of charity. — Thorongil
Throwing money at the problem will not fix it, for the condition is terminal and permanent. It will merely act as a fleeting and minutely effective band-aid. I am not saying not to give to charity or that I wouldn't if I had the means, I am only pointing out the sheer idiocy and folly in suggesting that it will make any substantial difference. — Thorongil
That you're not grateful to be so informed by such a man doesn't negate his value. — Thorongil
And I believe this too. What's wrong with seeking the truth? Presumably the harshness and violence of the world is true and requires pointing out and defending as such. — Thorongil
I shall seek the truth above all else. — Thorongil
The neoliberal elite is finished as far as the US is concerned in my opinion. A new age is upon us.I agree Trump is a good test of civilisation's current level of foresight and resilience. But surely you can rely on the CIA to arrange an accident for the sake of the prevailing neoliberal elite? — apokrisis
Oh yeah... >:O Where do you even take these pearls from? Honestly - read some history. There are no such things as "scientific" and non-scientific historians.Yeah sure. There are lots of ways the symptoms might present. But no serious (scientific) historian is going to talk about a loss of motivation when it is instead a loss of cohesion, or the senescence of habit, that removes the possibility to act. — apokrisis
It certainly sounds just as ridiculous as what you're saying sounds to me. You can choose your own bias-confirming scholarship instead of engaging with the literature and people out there who disagree with you. There is no way to "confirm ideas empirically" in history. You don't make experiments in the past.Yep. If it is a choice between your own bias-confirming scholarship and the actual scholarship of scientists who have to go out and confirm their ideas empirically, then surely we are all going to agree ... with you.
Don't you see how ridiculous this sounds? — apokrisis
But yes, loss of motivation causes loss of cohesion, not the other way around. — Agustino
You can choose your own bias-confirming scholarship instead of engaging with the literature and people out there who disagree with you. There is no way to "confirm ideas empirically" in history. You don't make experiments in the past. — Agustino
Glubb: The life-expectation of a great nation, it appears, commences with a violent, and usually unforeseen, outburst of energy, and ends in a lowering of moral standards, cynicism, pessimism and frivolity.
I've given you plenty of examples already. — darthbarracuda
Whether there is something wrong with being a passive pessimist is not really the point of the OP, although I hope you and others will consider what it actually means to be a passive pessimist in the long run. — darthbarracuda
I'm explaining how they certainly were not what I would call active pessimists. — darthbarracuda
I never said I wasn't a hypocrite, just that I'm a more productive hypocrite. — darthbarracuda
I'm sure it did a lot to help those who were on the receiving end. It didn't do "absolutely nothing" as you so boldly claim, otherwise it wouldn't actually be a good deed. — darthbarracuda
but making things comparatively better. — darthbarracuda
except there actually is. — darthbarracuda
There's nothing wrong with seeking the truth, per se, so long as you recognize that some truths are sought because you want to know, not because of some "higher purpose" that truth-seeking embodies. — darthbarracuda
Meanwhile in Ethiopia, over 14 million people don't really care about metaphysics. Because they haven't eaten in ten days. If you don't find anything wrong with this, fine. Just don't pretend Schopenhauer and co. did anything substantial over their lifetimes to help people like this. They were passive, focused more on abstract metaphysics than the suffering they were famous for characterizing. — darthbarracuda
It's not our conservative habits, but rather the financial interests involved. — Agustino
In other words, they weren't what you wish them to be, and you're upset about that fact. — Thorongil
You can't change the past and you can't change other people, so stop acting like a petulant child. — Thorongil
But I don't make it a habit of going out of my way to create essay length threads condemning them. — Thorongil
Productive in what way? Tell us all how great and wonderful darthbarracuda is in comparison with those icky "decadent" pessimists like Schopenhauer and Leopardi. — Thorongil
"In the grand scheme of things...." — Thorongil
The total amount of suffering is not lessened one single iota due to Schopenhauer giving to charity. Not one. Suffering and misery in fact increased exponentially after his death, as the human population exploded and we embarked on one of the most barbaric and violent centuries yet seen in the history of this sad, pathetic vale of tears. — Thorongil
Consequently, I do no wrong in withholding charity from starving Ethiopians, for I am not the cause of, and so am not responsible for, their plight. Now, lest you misconstrue what I am saying, charitable giving is good, undoubtedly, but not giving to charity is not bad. — Thorongil
Sure I did this merely because you were unwilling to engage in dialogue and instead took your views as the definite and undeniable truth. So if you can do that, why shouldn't I?You are happy to just make assertions without evidence. You describe the facts as they need to be to make your version of reality correct. — apokrisis
I have presented evidence in the form of the paper I've shared, as well as historical examples from the past. I haven't seen much evidence from you except you constructing a possible explanation via systems thinking of what is actually happening. But merely because it is possible doesn't mean it is also right. But I think this isn't our point of contention to be honest. I'm not saying that science (systems thinking) couldn't describe the historical relationships that we understand and know in more precise detail, and reveal more of their features. I'm not disagreeing there at all.But the very fact you must still present "evidence" in the form of these imaginary facts gives the game away — apokrisis
But I wouldn't deny this, and I wouldn't mind if you complement his account with a more detailed one involving systems thinking. Where I disagree is that systems thinking could render his account false - it can only complement it.And then, more relevantly, where General Glubb expresses your lament against social decadence, it in fact is an an amateur's way of getting at what theoretical biologists understand as the canonical lifecycle of organised systems. — apokrisis
Yes I agree - but now you must notice that this account does little to help one in practice. Such understanding for example doesn't show a leader how to start a nation in "a burst of youthful zest and energy", how to ensure that it has "just enough" organisation to be cohesive, and how to ensure it "has a new lack of constraint in terms of some source of power". This understanding doesn't provide guidelines. That's why most leaders of this kind - I'm not talking of the CEO of Google or an already established company - but people like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, etc. who create a new and powerful organisation - they don't need such understanding. It will not help them. A general is better off with understanding the principles expounded in the Art of War than learning systems theory. The principles are heuristics, which enable quickly "zooming in" on the right set of possible answers.So yes, that describes how things start immaturely in a burst of youthful zest and energy. The history of the world has been written by the rise of social groups which have "just enough" organisation to be cohesive, yet also a new lack of constraint in terms of some source of power - like horse riding, better ships, social mobility, or whatever. The group can ride out and take over their more conservative and hidebound neighbours.
And then a maturity develops. Even the Mongols and other "barbarians" got quite civilised, leading to a more balanced and persistent state of existence. — apokrisis
But apart from social rigidity and immobility, it is precisely the disintegration of these that lead to collapse. I agree that the fossilised elite becomes blind to the problem - in fact they become part of the problem - it's quite often this fossilised elite that becomes decadent first - they cease being the stout stoics that laid the ground for cultural success. There are just a few in society who remember the old discipline and who warn about the dangers of its abandonment. The rest are caught up in the zest and new found possibilities of the culture to notice.But inevitably - in a society that can't foresee the danger - conservative habit starts to create social rigidity and immobility. A fossilised elite develops. Folk start worrying that they aren't the stout stoics that laid the ground for cultural success. The focus goes to the lack of the old discipline, the decadence that is taking over. — apokrisis
You have to explain this in more detail. What does the collapse of society have to do with a conservative elite? To me, they aren't conservative at all - the elite in US, for example, isn't conservative at all. The Clintons aren't conservatives... In fact the collapse of the US is precisely due to the loss of conservative values.But equally, the critical problem of the system is the senescence represented by the conservative elite. It naturally thinks the answer to new problems is the answer to old problems. If what is seen as a symptom is decadence, then the cure must lie in exerting even greater control - applying old habits with even more effort. — apokrisis
To enforce them is impossible. But don't lose sight that their loss led to the current situation. Why did we lose them? Because human beings have a natural tendency towards immorality and dissolution - they have a tendency towards entropy. Negentropic structures ultimately collapse.But social habits make sense because they work. To enforce them is to try to crank a broken system harder. Instead, an intelligent society is one that seeks to evolve new forms of general cohesion. It encourages social experimentation as it needs to strike on whatever it is might be the new better balance. — apokrisis
But why do you think we differ on this? I agree with you.But where we differ is that I'm in favour of the right kind of liberality - a science-based freedom of thought. Political and economic systems need to be evidence-based and aimed at the general good. — apokrisis
You have to explain in more detail why. Also you have to explain in more detailed how the fossilised thought habits of neo-liberals aren't an equally big danger. I am all for reason as opposed to dogmatism even though I am religious myself - we need to do things because they make sense that we do them that way. So for example I'm not opposed to people living together if they're not married - most religious folks would be. I consider marriage a spiritual bond - so the physical institution of marriage is only good in-so-far as it points to the spiritual realm. And I acknowledge that some wouldn't need such an institution.So the fossilised thought habits of religious conservative elites are a clear and present danger for a modern society that wants to avoid its "inevitable" collapse. — apokrisis
Maybe it was meant to be like this, but in practice it clearly isn't how it is. In practice we see economic liberalisation and social progressivism.So the formula is conservative/religious social norms and economic liberalisation. — apokrisis
I don't think the powerful need a justification - except to throw it in the eyes of the fools. Sure, in that way, they do need a sort of mandate of heaven - as Chinese rulers would say. But in the end, what allows them to rape the world is that the world can't do anything to fight back. Because they can - that's why they do it.But clearly the two are interlocked because ultimately the only justification for Goldman Sachs and its ilk being allowed to rape the world is that the US is God's chosen people. — apokrisis
I think that as much trouble as Trump is, Clinton and her ilk would have been much much worse.But any outsider can see that its political system is deeply dysfunctional now. It is powerless to actually "drain the swamp" when all it can do is appoint a nespotic buffoon who exists in a bubble of bias-confirming Brietbart factoids. — apokrisis
Nope, this is just you projecting. — darthbarracuda
So maybe let's team up and do what Schopenhauer couldn't/didn't? — darthbarracuda
as I already have said how an active pessimist could still see this as supererogatory and yet be a part of it — darthbarracuda
Do you do anything wrong by not helping the child escape the water?
Or what if you saw a man kidnap a young child, and saw the license plate number on the vehicle? Surely you would think you have an obligation to call the police, no?
And what about those suffering by natural disasters? Who is to blame for this? Surely not the tsunami, but perhaps those who stood idly by and watched as people died. People who didn't have to die. — darthbarracuda
I suspect many attempts to limit morality in this way are at least partly due to a dislike of how demanding a morality without it would be — darthbarracuda
So it's easy to just say "not my problem" when the issue is thousands of miles away — darthbarracuda
yet for some reason found room to push in these idealistic, absolutist moral codes that drip with appeals to intention — darthbarracuda
Perhaps you will say that if they had given more to charity then things would have been comparatively better still, but this assumes you have some criterion for determining the adequate amount of charitable giving a person is obligated to meet, and that one is indeed obligated to meet it, which you have not yet divulged. — Thorongil
Thus, it could be that Schopenhauer et al suffer more profoundly than the Ethiopian villager, in which case your priorities ought to be reversed. — Thorongil
What is more, if you bring the Ethiopian out of his physical misery, then you have merely served as the enabler of his entering new forms thereof, that is, forms common to the materially satisfied and affluent, such as depression, substance abuse, risk of suicide, and other psychological disorders and conditions. In the absence of physical suffering, one creates fresh desires to strive after, whose unfulfillment causes yet more suffering. Paradoxically, then, the materially disadvantaged Ethiopian villager may actually be happier and more content than the materially prosperous American. — Thorongil
Thirdly, if you wish to end or alleviate suffering and agree that procreation is the principal cause thereof, then you ought to be focusing all of your efforts on encouraging people not to have children. By not doing this, and instead providing charitable assistance, you're acting in conflict with said goal. In other words, to use a word you accused Schopenhauer of earlier, you are in fact an accomplice to suffering by refusing to address the source. If the rightness or wrongness of an action is determined by the consequences of it, and the desired consequence in this case is an end to suffering, then it is wrong to give to charity, since it frees people to have children, which is the cause of suffering. — Thorongil
Simply put, I am suited to the vita contemplativa, rather than the vita activa, and civilization needs both. — Thorongil
An ethic isn't more true to the degree that it is demanding. — Thorongil
No, if by "not my problem" you mean "not responsible," then it's simply correct. If you honestly think that I am responsible for people starving in Ethiopia, then your definition of responsibility is in error, since it would say of me that I caused or intended to cause their suffering, which I clearly did not. Nor, as I said, do I have the means or the power to end it, unlike the drowning child example. — Thorongil
I just spoke with Donald J. Trump on the phone, and he told me this is just some crap that I shouldn't be listening to >:OTherefore, it is usually a life without great “crisis” or great “depressions” (by the way, depression is the fatal fate of any affirmative life) — darthbarracuda
You didn't intend that they starve, but you did intend to ignore their plight.
Again, I ask why intentions have any importance here. — darthbarracuda
Dear God in Heaven, is this a philosophy forum or a cook-book message board? — Heister Eggcart
Sure I did this merely because you were unwilling to engage in dialogue and instead took your views as the definite and undeniable truth. So if you can do that, why shouldn't I? — Agustino
The thing is you misunderstand the science of history if you think that in history we have undeniable evidence one way or another or if we can empirically test claims except by resorting to documentation we have from the past. — Agustino
Such understanding for example doesn't show a leader how to start a nation in "a burst of youthful zest and energy", how to ensure that it has "just enough" organisation to be cohesive, and how to ensure it "has a new lack of constraint in terms of some source of power". This understanding doesn't provide guidelines. — Agustino
but people like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, etc. who create a new and powerful organisation — Agustino
A general is better off with understanding the principles expounded in the Art of War than learning systems theory. — Agustino
There are just a few in society who remember the old discipline and who warn about the dangers of its abandonment. — Agustino
Being conservative corresponds more to concentrating on avoiding loss instead of gaining - realising that one loss is more significant than one victory. "Make sure you don't lose first, then think about winning" is a conservative principle. — Agustino
human beings have a natural tendency towards immorality and dissolution - they have a tendency towards entropy. Negentropic structures ultimately collapse. — Agustino
I don't think the powerful need a justification - except to throw it in the eyes of the fools. — Agustino
I think that as much trouble as Trump is, Clinton and her ilk would have been much much worse. — Agustino
How could it be "mathematical"? It seems that you have ignored Aristotle's dictum that not the same degree of precision and certainty can be expected from all sciences, and this doesn't make them any less scientific.But history has suffered as a science in not being terribly mathematical in its theoretical thinking. That is what importing the mathematical tools of other sciences is all about. — apokrisis
Well if you really ask me, because they are idiots. Well actually they aren't really idiots, they are only consciously idiots. Because in truth flat hierarchies, managerial retreats, creative destruction and the like are PR moves - moves to make people willing to work for you because direct power is no longer effective - also a way to justify actions like firing people (ahh we're just being creatively destructive). Big business is more politics than real business.I'm not sure then why people form rational policies around ideas of creative destruction, flat hierarchies, the value of managerial retreats, campaigns against red tape, skunk works, and a thousand other completely standard approaches to loosen up organisations, foster youthful energy. — apokrisis
I definitely don't believe in neoliberal politics. To a large degree actually, I despise neoliberal politics.Do you believe in neoliberal politics and not understand it? — apokrisis
:-! So? I understand the power of monopoly too. Does that help me in any way? To say they understand the power of monopoly is so facile it doesn't explain anything about them. If you say something like this to a pragmatic businessman, and they are free to express themselves how they wish, they will laugh in your face. We're all trying to be monopolies. So the fact they have also tried to be monopolies doesn't explain why they in fact are, while the rest of us aren't.Not perhaps great examples as they understood the power of monopoly. Which IBM taught them was the way to go. — apokrisis
Which is the optimal stage - and I would characterise that stage by conservatism - not losing becomes more important than winning. The only time when taking risks make sense is when you have no hope of otherwise winning or surviving. Then, when you are cornered, then risks become worth taking, even very very big risks - that's why Sun Tzu advocates for example against cornering your opponent, because then he'll start taking the very very big risks, which could very quickly reverse the situation.But the Art of War is applied systems theory. It talks about the mature stage of systems development - flexible and not hidebound, energetic but not rash. — apokrisis
Why do you think a heuristic understanding of decadence isn't sufficient to distinguish between a mindset which will work and one which will fail?Now more than ever we need a scientific, and not a heuristic, definition of decadence (and its obverse). We can't wait for the new mindset to prove itself in another generation. — apokrisis
Have you ever wondered if there is an advantage in faking senescence? :)Yep. After you have been around long enough you will by definition have accumulated stuff that is of value - wisdom, property, power, resources. So attention does turn to risk-avoidance. It's classic investment behaviour. And senescent. — apokrisis
Personally I'm still very young, and I never had the "youthful powers of recovery from destructive perturbation" that you're speaking of. I think people who think they have such powers are deluding themselves. And in many cases when they do "survive" - it's just luck and chance. They should never have taken such a risk in the first place if they were smart.You don't take risks if you intuitively understand you have long lost the youthful powers of recovery from destructive perturbation. — apokrisis
:’( I think unfortunately most youthful Silicon Valley "investors" are idiots. A few of them get lucky, sure. But it's not a good business strategy. Most of them who ever try fail. And as we know, it's not worth always trying if you always fail.But life should look very different from the perspective of a youthful "investor". Failure itself becomes the valuable learning opportunity - as every Silicon Valley entrepreneur chants as a mantra. — apokrisis
Yes I am aware of this. That's their understanding and it is absolutely wrong. They are simply deceiving themselves, and this becomes possible because large corporations are more about politics than actually making money.And again, if you hang around the circles of political or corporate power, that's their understanding. — apokrisis
In terms of technology yes, but where is the evidence with regards to social organisation?Humans have the opposite tendency - if you check the anthropological evidence - to accumulate negentropic structure ... because it is negentropic structure that allows a successful acceleration of generalised entropification. — apokrisis
If it wasn't apparent, I was trying to show how intentions have little importance. — darthbarracuda
One can always characterize any situation to suit one's needs by invoking intentions here and there.
That's the lesson of consequentialism - the only thing that matters at the end is what's left over.
The first example is of Arthur Schopenhauer, one of the greatest German philosophers of all time. Truly, an undeniable genius and the number-one icon for philosophical pessimism. Here we have him asking us to compare the suffering experienced by the prey with the pleasure experienced by the predator, or pointing out the tedium and pointlessness of life in general. His prescription to those who read him? Detachment from the material world, isolation, contemplation, asceticism. — darthbarracuda
Schopenhauer believes that a person who experiences the truth of human nature from a moral perspective — who appreciates how spatial and temporal forms of knowledge generate a constant passing away, continual suffering, vain striving and inner tension — will be so repulsed by the human condition, and by the pointlessly striving Will of which it is a manifestation, that he or she will lose the desire to affirm the objectified human situation in any of its manifestations. The result is an attitude of the denial towards our will-to-live, which Schopenhauer identifies with an ascetic attitude of renunciation, resignation, and willessness, but also with composure and tranquillity. In a manner reminiscent of traditional Buddhism, he recognizes that life is filled with unavoidable frustration, and acknowledges that the suffering caused by this frustration can itself be reduced by minimizing one's desires. Moral consciousness and virtue thus give way to the voluntary poverty and chastity of the ascetic. St. Francis of Assisi (WWR, Section 68) and Jesus (WWR, Section 70) emerge, accordingly, as Schopenhauer's prototypes for the most enlightened lifestyle, as do the ascetics from every religious tradition. — SEP
Buddhist ethics is a bit different in that it talks about the existence of bodhisattvas, or beings who achieve nirvana yet stick around anyway to help everyone else out. True altruists. Many Buddhist philosophers of the past could be seen as consequentialists. For Buddhists, it is not simply enough to point out the suffering in the world, but to actively promote the destruction of it, as suffering is something that should not exist. — darthbarracuda
Trying and failing, yeah. — Heister Eggcart
Consider yourself falsely accused of murdering someone, when in reality you merely acted in self-defense. Regardless of this fact, however, you have been sentenced to life in prison without parole. If you wanted to contest such a verdict, how ought you go about doing so? Ah, yes, through an appeal to good intention. Otherwise, you must accept the wrong done unto you simply on the grounds of "what's left over" - i.e., you killed someone, they're dead, and because you done did it, you're guilty, whether you intended to kill the intruder in your home, say, or not. — Heister Eggcart
Right, so there's a difference between legal code and moral code - justice and values. — darthbarracuda
Some might argue that justice is a value, but for a consequentialist, justice is merely an instrumental value of a rather ritualistic and vindictive nature. — darthbarracuda
The fact that they didn't seem to really advocate anything more is the main point here. — darthbarracuda
they offered no real plan of action — darthbarracuda
Not everyone has access to the aesthetic. Not everyone has the opportunity to contemplate the universe as a leisure. Not everyone even has the intelligence to think about their condition (non-human animals for example). — darthbarracuda
The criterion imo would be to at least emphasize charitable and altruistic actions for the benefit of others, so long as you yourself don't drop below whatever you would see to be the line between "manageable" and "okay I'm suffering big time now". — darthbarracuda
curiously seemed to be overly-concerned about his own well-being and status in mainland Germany and Europe as a whole. — darthbarracuda
To attribute the angst and ennui Schopenhauer apparently felt as "suffering" is to bastardize suffering and insult those who actually are suffering. — darthbarracuda
And if he thought this way then he probably shouldn't have taught or done anything related to philosophy as a whole. — darthbarracuda
It's just obvious that extreme starvation is worse than ennui. — darthbarracuda
They "recognize" that other people exist but don't seem to really act like it — darthbarracuda
Also, those who are extremely disadvantaged and are brought up to a higher level of living typically have a lot more appreciation for their new living conditions. — darthbarracuda
This is why I said I'm focused more on non-human animals — darthbarracuda
Higher-intelligence does not necessitate higher suffering. — darthbarracuda
Humans have a third: fix the problem — darthbarracuda
But this probably wouldn't be as effective as you might envision it to be. Nor do I think I have the guts to do something like this. — darthbarracuda
But this doesn't change the fact that you are not an active pessimist. Again, if you don't find anything wrong with this, fine. If passive pessimism suits you and fulfills whatever ethical criteria you see as important, fine. — darthbarracuda
but you did intend to ignore their plight — darthbarracuda
You intended to allow something to happen so long as you are knowledgeable of it and did nothing to interfere. — darthbarracuda
They might be important in the legal sense, sure. But in the moral sense, what is so important about them? — darthbarracuda
Schopenhauer described himself as atheist — Wayfarer
Buddhist ethics is completely different — Wayfarer
Schopenhauer's main ethical principles are: "Harm no one; rather, help everyone as much as you can." That's not far enough or amenable to your position? — Thorongil
But those who do have access to aesthetic enjoyment, contemplation, and the gift of intelligence aren't bad for making use of these things. — Thorongil
And who's to say they did not do precisely this? You? Why should we believe you? Your only argument to this effect has involved the ludicrous complaint about the quality of their pillows, something I doubt you have much expertise in. Unless you have the bank account records of these men and have deduced from them the precise amount of money they could have given to the equivalent of whatever infallible charity you give to, then you will have confirmed the feeling of hot air emanating from your posts. — Thorongil
This is so vague a charge as to be meaningless. I feel that any amount of specificity would bring about its death. — Thorongil
I actually don't recall you saying this at all, anywhere in this thread at least. — Thorongil
You again assume he had a free choice in the matter! — Thorongil
No, it's not. There are ascetics who literally starve themselves to death, such as the Jains with their practice of sallekhana. They clearly prefer that to ennui and might even say that they suffer less thereby (since it's their ticket to leaving samsara, the world of suffering, behind). — Thorongil
Consider also that some philosophers, like Galen Strawson, object even to our being responsible for anything at all! Thus, your position is very far from being as obvious as you claim. — Thorongil
Maybe because they can't help it, owing to their characters! — Thorongil
Once again, I find myself repeating the same unanswered questions and objections. This will likely be my last post to you here. — Thorongil
No we don't. You sound for all the world like an optimist here! — Thorongil
Hold the phone! Darth is appealing to his character to explain why he might not do something?! — Thorongil
Victoire si douce! — Thorongil
But I've already told that I have no means or power to help them. — Thorongil
I'm not a sociopath thank you very much. — Thorongil
Intentions are important because my walking toward you with a knife means something completely different depending on if I intend to murder you or intend to chop up some onions for dinner. — Thorongil
Most laws are based on moral principles, so this is a false distinction. — Thorongil
No he didn't. In fact he objected to the term. — Thorongil
From what? It's not completely different from Schopenhauer's. — Thorongil
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