Human stupidity (i.e. incorrigibly maladaptive misuses of intelligence / know-how / judgment which inadvertently do harm to oneself and/or others) is the oldest STD and is rarely treatable by culture or medication. — 180 Proof
Hey, don't give up so easy. — Pretty gal to spurned suitor
Nothing personal, it's just business.
As you yourself agree, no economic or academic or sociological condition that you possess can protect your offspring from random happenstance harms. Suffering is just a bad justification for the antinatalist viewpoint because suffering is too complicated on the cost/benefits analysis scale for it to be used as the main justification for antinatalism — universeness
I am not hopeless (even in brackets). One person's romance can be experienced by another as pure trauma. — universeness
Do you really think the rich qualify as good parents merely because they are rich?
Why do so many children of the rich end up as messed up as any child of a poor person? — universeness
Is the child responsible for any pain/suffering/stretch-marked skin etc caused to the mother during the birth process or is it a consequence of an evolutionary process that has no inherent moral driver? — universeness
I guess you don't understand my post. — 180 Proof
incoherent — Cuthbert
On the contrary. It was said , the flaws are in the very real imperfections in oneself, language is doing what it is supposed to do. Language is a trivial matter, simply a tool. Just one link in the chain.
So, It is when one loses sight of these real imperfections within oneself, tires to conceal one's own shortcomings by the cunning use of language (weaving supporting philosophies), or any/all tools available in said edifice : always on the defense of one's fragile house. then it may serve well to do a reality check, as has been suggested in previous post. That being said,take it easy. — skyblack
Unbounded — 180 Proof
How does an instruction instruct its own composition? I find it hard to understand how an algorithm or code or whatever used to determine the structure and components of the universe comes about simultaneously with that which it’s coding — Benj96
I think it is eternity - without beginning and without end.
Wittgenstein in a lecture once asked his audience to imagine coming across a man who is saying, ‘…5, 1, 4, 1, 3—finished!’, and, when asked what he has been doing, replies that he has just finished reciting the complete decimal expansion of pi backwards—something that he has been doing at a steady rate for all of past eternity.
— Moore, A. W. 1990.The Infinite. — Cuthbert
Most interesting! — Ms. Marple
How do you deal with the pointlessness of existence? — Tate
All the great epics start with those assumptions. Well, actually that's not true.
You could start a great epic with that assumption, though. Except it might all end up being for nothing. Pointless adventures. — Tate
Indeed, as I said already, established religion is always the perversion of spirituality. Jesus spoke of 'the Father', not of 'an omni-benevolent deity', and a glance at the Old Testament does not give the impression of omni-benevolence at all, but more of an arbitrary tyrannical vindictive jealous and cruel god. More like a Roman Emperor than a crucified carpenter. 'God is good' is another justification of the status quo by the powers that be. The ultimate demonstration that God is good is that he has put the white man in charge of the world. — unenlightened
The innocent suffer because to live is to be vulnerable. Life is a losing game - everyone dies. So rather than pretend it is not so, let us use our intelligence and social interdependence to mitigate suffering where we can, by feeding the hungry, housing the homeless, healing the sick, and sharing our common resources wherever there is need and suffering. You never know, your next life might be one of those whose suffering you did, or did not alleviate in this life. — unenlightened
Inasmuch as ye do it unto the least of these my children, ye do it unto me. — Jesus
This is the radical karma of Buddhism, that since the self is an illusion, you yourself are the Buddha and the tyrant and the innocent sufferer, and to alleviate the suffering of another is as commonsensical as for the right hand to bandage a cut on the left — unenlightened
Your attachment to the karmic explanation stinks. What is this 'our pain' you speak of? I want my pain to end immediately. You speak of our pain by way of appropriating the pain of others and then use the notion of karma to justify your complacency about it. — unenlightened
How can I find ‘karma’ abhorrent’? I said those espousing ‘karma’ as a justification for people less fortunate as themselves as ‘abhorrent’.
It is especially silly when based on a steadfast belief in reincarnation from one body to another.
Where is having the cake and eating it? I don’t quite understand what you are getting at with that line? — I like sushi
It justifies it, because it justifies everything, by making justice a property of nature. And that means that any amount of exploitation is justified.The dogma of karma comforts the fortunate and privileged and blames the afflicted and exploited for their misery. It is entirely natural and commonplace for the privileged to come to believe they deserve their privilege, and karma is simply the Indian version of godswill and the white-man's burden. It fits right in with the caste system, and helps to sustain it along with rampant toxic sexism. I am not the expert, but my suspicion is that the doctrine does not come from Buddha himself, but is an accretion that probably predates him. rather like Roman cultural accretions to Christianity unconnected with the reported words or deeds of Jesus. — unenlightened
Hmmm, I disagree. I don't count art as being on the same level of other things we do, assuming that includes basically everything, given the triteness of your response. Maybe it's similar to other things, I don't know (provisionally), but it's not just "another activity" in my mind. — Noble Dust
I like this, but how does it apply to art? — Noble Dust
Er, no. I am saying that there are reasons to do and believe things. — Bartricks
