Hunger/starvation. And it doesn't matter whether you have sufficient nutrients, any more than it matters that you have sufficient heroin. Without it you collapse into horrible pain and death, and your life has o revolve around preventing that. We call that a cognitive disorder, an addiction. A very, very bad one. — The Great Whatever
Perhaps if we were wild animals without access to a supermarket, our lives would quite literally revolve around eating. — darthbarracuda
Your life literally does revolve around eating, though. In order to have your needs met, you must spend the largest portion of your life doing things you would rather not do, and in turn damaging your body and mind. If your physical needs were automatically met, you could just do whatever you wanted. — The Great Whatever
But I would stress that you can "transcend", so to speak, the basic revolving around food. Perhaps food is one of our weaknesses or our anchors, but it is certainly not usually the number one thing people are worried about in a first world country. — darthbarracuda
We could easily just say that people go through the trials of work and marriage just to be able to afford the bed they sleep on. — darthbarracuda
It seems like you are struggling to come to terms with the fact that life is completely meaningless and filled with suffering. The inherent meaninglessness of life does not have any logical connection to how much we enjoy our lives. And if it seems to be the case anyway, then there are a plethora of existential literature on this, from the Stoics to Sartre. It's the suffering that matters and is problematic. I believe it was Frankl that said that humans despair at suffering because they find no meaning behind it; if there is no meaning behind suffering, then suicide may as well be the best option. (Frankl was a Holocaust survivor). — darthbarracuda
It literally, factually is. And not only those who are starving! — The Great Whatever
Sleep is another physical need. — The Great Whatever
Life can't both be meaningless and filled with suffering: suffering is a kind of meaning, a bad one, which is why it matters. — The Great Whatever
Meh. Help the starving, it will make you feel good, or at least more than complaining will. — darthbarracuda
You misunderstand me. When we see no reason for suffering, when we see no way of rationalizing this suffering (btw rationalizing suffering is normal, healthy and productive), that is when we open ourselves up to suicidal nihilism. If I were to give you a cockroach to eat, and as you munched you found it absolutely disgusting and you could not find anything redeemable about it, you would spit it out just as you would kill yourself if you thought the amount of irredeemable suffering was greater than what you could handle. — darthbarracuda
The best way to end starvation is not to reproduce. You approve of the suffering of starvation because you accept that the world should continue as it is. — The Great Whatever
You can't rationalize suffering because rationalization is itself a response to suffering. — The Great Whatever
Also, complaining won't do anything at all whereas helping people will at least keep the suffering lower than it has to be. — darthbarracuda
When did I say this? (hint, I never did) I'm an anti-natalist because of the existence of things like suffering, although I don't dwell on the fact of birth. It's merely unnecessary. — darthbarracuda
What the hell does this mean?! If you can't rationalize suffering than you must not be able to derive any meaning from it. — darthbarracuda
That depends on what you mean by 'helping people.' Most things that you might think would help them actually won't — The Great Whatever
and those that do (like giving them food) arise due to structural problems that 'giving a man a fish' will not solve in any substantial way (they will starve tomorrow instead of today). — The Great Whatever
If you don't approve of life because it's not good enough to live, then you need to reconcile this with your views on your own life, which are inconsistent. — The Great Whatever
Meaning is not 'derived.' We do not 'make our own meaning,' that's liberal bullshit. — The Great Whatever
This is a very large sweeping claim. How do you know this? — darthbarracuda
This is why you teach a man to fish. Or even better teach him to be a vegetarian. You get them back on their feet so they can live life again. — darthbarracuda
There's nothing inconsistent in saying that life has the potential of being quite bad, especially since the world revolves around the egos of the least trustworthy. — darthbarracuda
So, actually, I would argue that it is you that must reconcile your position of vehement anti-birth with your conscious decision to endorse your own birth by continuing to live. It's one thing to not have a child because you fear that they may potentially experience something truly horrific (my position); it's quite another to resist having a child because you think there is absolutely no worth in living and at the same time continue to live. If you are to take the latter route, then you logically must feel suicidal to avoid being disingenuous. — darthbarracuda
Because life's problems are structural, and individual gestures don't remedy them. — The Great Whatever
If you were actually interested in 'teaching how to fish,' then by this you would mean stopping reproduction altogether, since the source of starvation is reproduction. — The Great Whatever
Life does not revolve around anyone's ego. Again, the problems are structural: they are not caused by the whims of 'bad guys,' nor will their replacement with 'good guys' and 'happy thoughts' cure them. — The Great Whatever
Continuing to live isn't endorsing your own birth. I had no control over being born, and it would have been better if I hadn't been. — The Great Whatever
People want to be happy living a certain kind of life, they don't simply want to be happy. — Agustino
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.