Unfortunately, speculation about the nature of existence and metaphysics, which once held great appeal, has declined in popularity and remains a niche pursuit. — schopenhauer1
the pleasure of hard tasks is rooted in the accomplishment of a specific, concrete goal — schopenhauer1
Wait a minute. When did "speculation about the nature of existence and metaphysics" have great appeal? What exactly are you referencing here? Literature? Philosophy? Film? Beer hall conversation? — BC
My reading of history and literature leads me to think that "speculation about the nature of existence and metaphysics" has always been a niche activity. — BC
Indeed, and that pleasure has been enjoyed for quite a long time -- especially by the people supervising or profiting from the hard work of accomplishment. Not sure how much the grunts working away in the pits felt about it. — BC
Spinoza made lenses for a living and was still able to produce some musings during his short life. — NOS4A2
Are Descartes, Hobbes & Leibniz modern? — 180 Proof
What's of great interest to me is speculation is sometimes fruitful and despite the appalling track record, people still do it. I guess it's kinda a fun way to spend a lazy Sunday afternoon, sippin' on something. — Agent Smith
Does practical = better? The way you phrase "fun way" "lazy", and "appalling track record".. Let me give you a scenario.. What if everyday everybody did all the things to stay alive, with no thought to speculation? You coded the code, hammered the nail, crunched the number, but that's it. Consumed your consumption. Repeat. Oh wait, that is much of what goes on anyways. I don't see how that's any less pernicious. — schopenhauer1
Religion, while perhaps no longer a productive avenue for speculation, at least offered a framework for considering the world in a more imaginative way — schopenhauer1
'Religion' is not and has never been a monolithic entity, a single thing. When it's used in this context, it denotes the Enlightenment schema of philosophy, religion and science, each with their own magisteria, and with religion the waning voice of premodernity. But in pre-modern and archaic times there was no separately-defined sphere known as 'religion' - it was simply 'the law' which encompassed every aspect of life, governing social relations, the rythm of the days, months and years, and providing the cosmic backdrop against which the affairs of humans played out. But within these vast and ancient cultural lifeforms, there are still encoded many of the dramas and mysteries of the psyche, and of birth life and death. Think the Greek Myths and the Bhagavad Gita and other epics. — Wayfarer
So - I sense what you sense is lacking, and I think it's heading in a good direction, but I thnk it will involve a long journey. — Wayfarer
am kind of sympathetic to Schopenhauer's take — schopenhauer1
What makes you think it's heading in a good direction? — schopenhauer1
Spinoza made lenses for a living and was still able to produce some musings during his short life — NOS4A2
Philosophy was never a "popular" pursuit at any given time in history. But it started before atoms were discovered. Speculation, in the classical sense, changed once we had achieved advancements in all aspects of human activities.Unfortunately, speculation about the nature of existence and metaphysics, is not popular and remains a niche pursuit. — schopenhauer1
...the technocratic practicality of the Western values... is really what counts. — schopenhauer1
We can only hope. — Wayfarer
It seems that we have become so preoccupied with practicalities that we have lost touch with the abstract and speculative — schopenhauer1
Yes, I can se BC coming in with some joke regarding the last sentence, something about scanning groceries at the checkout line and its connection with Plato's Forms — schopenhauer1
meaningfulness in the mundane — schopenhauer1
there seems to be lack of "meaningfulness in the mundane", whereby the meaningful informs the mundane — schopenhauer1
Wasn't the "Protestant work ethic" an effort to make the mundane meaningful? The idea was that all work was as sacred as the labor of priests. — BC
So, scanning groceries was a service to God and Man, alike. — BC
Absolutely!
Can alienated people in an alienating culture overcome their alienation? I don't know if they can or not.
In various discussions around here about the meaningless universe it has been repeatedly asserted that man can impose, import, invent, invoke, create ... meaning.
How well is that working? Reasonably well.
BUT if one feels mired in anomie, alienation, meaninglessness, soullessness, etc. it is natural to believe that everyone is in the same hopeless boat. If one is NOT mired in the dark swamp, it is difficult to understand why some people are. I have had some long episodes of feeling alienated, meaningless, soulless, etc. in the past; and I have had some long episodes of feeling connected to and part of a solid meaning system.
What made the difference, moving from one state to another. Well, I don't know, exactly. Grace is as good an explanation as I can find. — BC
Can alienated people in an alienating culture overcome their alienation? I don't know if they can or not. — BC
I am very hesitant to go over my rant about replacing liberal education with education for technology but I think many of our problems are directly related to the change in education. Binary human thinking is no better than AI binary thinking. Young men who learn how to use weapons and how to make bombs, but do not learn how to have a pleasant life, are more than a workplace problem. — Athena
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