So then perhaps the future we seek isn't just "don't bother me and I won't bother you", but the merging of all our enjoyments and sufferings. — Ajemo
It also leads to continual conflict between those whose preferences are being at least minimally satisfied (those who don't mind let's say working to survive), and those who would have never asked for this if the world aligned to their preferences.
With the idea of only SOME people's preferences satisfied, and those preferences entailing the infringement of other people's preferences, this makes this existence morally disqualifying. — schopenhauer1
But the ideal of representing all people's preferences is something all societies pursue in some way no matter the religion or culture. — Ajemo
The point is that an existence with some preference never met means that existence is not moral. Period. That’s if we believe that peoples preferences being met is the moral standard. — schopenhauer1
For Nietzsche the two sides of this battle are really the same concept, truth and morality as the unchanging , the pure, the perfect. Nietzsche wants to replace this traditional morality with an ethics that recognizes, celebrates and accelerates the incessant differentiating change underlying and overflowing your static notions of the nothing and of suffering. — Joshs
Just seems like more ways to justify suffering.This particular thread is saying that if preferences satisfied are a moral standard than this existence entails it never being moral. — schopenhauer1
And your preference is for never having been born. If that were satisfied you would consider it moral. Never having been born is your notion of divinity , that which ends all suffering. — Joshs
Yeah, well, it's never too late for "some people" to abruptly end their "encounter". :smirk:Some people would rather not have encountered a world in the first place ... — schopenhauer1
"Moral" (or not) belongs to existents, not "existence".The point is that an existence with some preference never met means that existence is not moral. Period. — schopenhauer1
Adaptively managing suffering (attempting to do so) is not "justifying suffering" any more than to eat "justifies" hunger or to bury the dead "justifies" mortality. :roll:Just seems like more ways to justify suffering. I’m not on board with that. — schopenhauer1
This particular thread is saying that if preferences satisfied are a moral standard than this existence entails it never being moral. — schopenhauer1
The best kind of existence would be one, perhaps, that is suited to each individual tastes/preferences without infringing on other people's tastes/preferences. That would mean by necessity everyone would have to enjoy their favored existence without infringing on other people's favored existence (if this existence was trying to be moral and it was agreed that enjoying one's own preferences was deemed as moral). But wait!!
What if your favored existence only is realized by infringing on other people's favored existence? — schopenhauer1
is trying to convince everyone they should refuse to go on breathing or breed any more little breathers because there's "too much" air pollution. — 180 Proof
...But sadly only convinces one that the world would be a far more charming and cheerful place (indeed, in which to unconscionably suffer!) with fewer schopenhauer1-types about, incessantly jeremiahing. — ZzzoneiroCosm
schopenhauer1 is a bit of a one-trick pony — T Clark
So it goes. — Vonnegut
As a psychotherapist-to-be, my instinct is to try to help. — ZzzoneiroCosm
A bit of a nasty implication. Or a nasty bit of implication. Or an implicatory bit of nastiness. — T Clark
I suppose the nasty is another bit of fallout from the stigma attached to seeking help.nasty — T Clark
If that were satisfied you would consider it moral. One would have to accept your concept of having never been born as a preferable alternative to life in order to consider existence immoral. — Joshs
Yeah, well, it's never too late for "some people" to abruptly end their "encounter". :smirk: — 180 Proof
"Moral" (or not) belongs to existents, not "existence". — 180 Proof
statistical, and varies in intensity of preferences not satisfied. And this may be for the worse for humans as there will be slow realization of it being morally worse off. It also leads to continual conflict between those whose preferences are being at least minimally satisfied (those who don't mind let's say working to survive), and those who would have never asked for this if the world aligned to their preferences.
With the idea of only SOME people's preferences satisfied, and those preferences entailing the infringement of other people's preferences, this makes this existence morally disqualifying. — schopenhauer1
Almost everyone's "favored existence" would include being able to live sociably and peacefully with other people. Clearly then, almost every favored existence requires people to accept your so-called "infringement," otherwise known as friendship, loyalty, love, generosity, empathy, compassion, trust, honesty... — T Clark
It's clear now that I don't know what you're whinging about, man, because you don't know what you're whinging about either. — 180 Proof
. Also, he always comes to the discussions prepared with specific positions and arguments, unlike 63.459% of the other members. He writes well.
If I'm not in the mood to cross swords with his brand of pessimism, I avoid the discussion. You can't say you didn't expect what you get. — T Clark
We have both gotten used to being voices howling in the wilderness. We wilderness howlers are dismissed out of hand, even if our howled message is right on the money. Dressed in rags, eating locusts, (roasted. salted, nutty, crunchy, nutritious), howling, of course; and harshing the mellow of the bourgeoisie just doesn't make one popular,
"Blessed are the shat upon." Simon and Garfunkel — Bitter Crank
The best kind of existence would be one, perhaps, that is suited to each individual tastes/preferences without infringing on other people's tastes/preferences. — schopenhauer1
The best kind of existence would be one, perhaps, that is suited to each individual tastes/preferences without infringing on other people's tastes/preferences — schopenhauer1
Live and let live. — SYT
What if your favored existence only is realized by infringing on other people's favored existence? — schopenhauer1
Aut neca aut necare (kill or be killed)
With the idea of only SOME people's preferences satisfied, and those preferences entailing the infringement of other people's preferences, this makes this existence morally disqualifying. — schopenhauer1
Maybe there's a perspective other than the egological. — Wayfarer
It's clear now that I don't know what you're whinging about, man, because you don't know what you're whinging about either. — 180 Proof
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.