Zapffe's model lays it out well (distract, ignore, anchor in some value or reason, and sublimate). — schopenhauer1
You cannot extricate that which is inbuilt into our evolutionary cognitive framework. — schopenhauer1
Suffice to say that internal mental chatter is the default state of humanity, excacerbated by our media-saturated culture — Wayfarer
I am having trouble what you envision this "being nature, pure and simple" is. And I am also perplexed how it is you think humans can ever get to it, overriding our innate linguistic-based/signifier capacities: — schopenhauer1
my contention is that in no possible world is there a state of satisfaction — schopenhauer1
I don't see how it could ever be different for the human animal — schopenhauer1
come from having a linguistic-based mind, and the dynamics of our brain. — schopenhauer1
There is no secret knowledge that then "drops" the pretense of a linguistic mind that evaluates, reasons, explains, etc. It is how humans function and is part of the socialization process, which cannot be bypassed. — schopenhauer1
What Schopenhauer was saying about Boredom, is beyond merely having nothing to do and tedium. Rather, it is a sense of non-fulfillment in our being. — schopenhauer1
is driven by this angst. — schopenhauer1
we were to think about it in neoplatonic or medieval, or gnostic terms, we can say that a "perfected" state, one of purely "being" (not becoming) would be one where we would wont for nothing. There would be no need for need — schopenhauer1
but how could it be different, for the human? We evolved thus. — schopenhauer1
Will is ultimately the idea of this radical instrumental nature to existing as a self-reflective animal in this world. — schopenhauer1
If we are but illusory Will, trapped in subject-object, then the saintly person is able to be moved beyond this to see all as universally the same Will and thus helping with another's suffering and easing their burden is to them a delight as it is helping themselves. It is as if there was no separation.. — schopenhauer1
he didn't think everyone had this kind of agapic/philial love capacity — schopenhauer1
Everything is instrumental.. all the way down. O — schopenhauer1
Will is ultimately the idea of this radical instrumental nature to existing as a self-reflective animal in this world. — schopenhauer1
I think the Stoics to a point, have it right in the mindset that one has to put forward the "worst" version of events.. But not for the sake of virtue, as the Stoics would have it, but because it is therapeutic to the soul to confront one's Willing and suffering nature. — schopenhauer1
Less adequately pondered is the fact that much of what it is that the two have in common was taken by Schopenhauer from Kant. — Bryan Magee, Schopenhauer's Philosophy
:up:Nice that he mentions Tao of Physics, too. — Wayfarer
But I see this idea of "already there" a kind of version of "mindfulness". "I am not this.." "My evaluation of the pain is not the pain".. Etc. etc. The thing itself, is not the thing I interpret. And so you convince yourself through a sort of repeated mantra that the pain you think you are feeling is not what is real. — schopenhauer1
Humans, due to the "projections" (using your terms), cannot help but be who they are- self-reflective beings. There is no "going back to Eden". Self-reflection is baked into the human condition. — schopenhauer1
Also, I think you slightly misconstrue Boredom here as a secondary trait, when BECAUSE of its foundation in the HUMAN condition, — schopenhauer1
This sounds like the fadd-ish distillation of Buddhist practices of "mindfulness". — schopenhauer1
Yes, definitely. Except we are not the projections, albeit, seemingly captive by them.It is projections all the way down, — schopenhauer1
ignorance is bliss — Outlander
Believing that the world "is", and you are just there putting your spin on it, matters not, as you will never extricate the two. — schopenhauer1
I’m guessing this guy’s a plumber. Not classically beautiful, I grant you. — praxis
which in my view is a tangent, rather than a descendent of the original group. — schopenhauer1
such as Mary Magdalene's intricate connection, and the importance of James the Just, Jesus' brother. — schopenhauer1
certainly the notion of "the Law" being overtaken by the "higher truth of Christ", — schopenhauer1
Oh, OK. That might explain the "radical"? Or are you saying Paul was "presented" by the Church as a tangent from Peter/James for e.g.? Imagine genuine Epistles of Paul buried somewhere because it reflects accord with the Judaisers.as a tangent (quite deliberately so), — schopenhauer1
The emphasis on the Kingdom, Son of Man, use of baptism, End of Times, and asceticism point to a strong link to the group — schopenhauer1
The other sleight of hand is to believe Jesus wasn't at some point at least a student of the Pharisees, which he seemed to be, before being heavily influenced by John the Baptist and his Essenic form of Judaism. Mix that together, you get Jesus' most likely ideological underpinnings. — schopenhauer1
Galatians as opposed to Romans regarding Paul's complete thinking. — BitconnectCarlos
Yes, very much so it could have been that. Galatians simply illustrates a "desperation" not to have the evangelical success go backwards. But for sure you are correct.Could it not have been both? That he was both an evangelist who was serious about spreading Xtianity and reasonably saw circumcision and dietary laws as a hindrance to that end and that he was sincere in his views that Jesus was God and that salvation occurred through faith in him? — BitconnectCarlos
Yes. Good point. I agree.gThomas lends further credence to Paul's disregard for circumcision. — BitconnectCarlos
80-90 AD I don't know the extent to which the Sanhedrin was opposing or dealing with the Early Church in those days. — BitconnectCarlos
I think Schopenhauer would answer that you cannot help but pursue it; it's not a choice. — schopenhauer1
We are habituated for anticipation for what we must do next. — schopenhauer1
It is always you situated in the world, not just the world. Believing that the world "is", and you are just there putting your spin on it, matters not, as you will never extricate the two. — schopenhauer1
we’ve started AI in the wrong direction, conceiving it first as disembodied brains — NOS4A2
AI assistants mimic this human tendency at all. They rather seem to be open minded to a fault. — Pierre-Normand
The very notion of an illusion presupposes that there is something real of which the illusion is a mere semblance or distortion — Sam26
Therefore, if consciousness itself were an illusion, what is the state we are actually in? — Sam26
It seems rather nonsensical to suggest that the very medium through which we understand illusions could itself be an illusion. — Sam26
In short, claiming that consciousness is an illusion is not just misleading, but fundamentally incoherent. — Sam26
ChatGPT 4.0
"Yes, that is a solid definition — Sam26
Just because something is constructed only for humans and only by humans doesn’t require that it not be real, not be, not be thereby constructed. Humans are being humans too. — Fire Ologist
what you mean? — schopenhauer1
Thank youtry following this thread: — schopenhauer1
He elevates it from a passing emotion to THE emotion par excellance.. As it reveals the vanity of existence. — schopenhauer1
That in the end, we are not satisfied being. It is an endless onrush of satisfaction-fulfillment because cannot just be. — schopenhauer1
He has aged well/was farsighted. I'm inspired to read further. Honestly, my only brush with Schopenhauer has been in those large philosophy readers. Yet, I knew I was compelled by his thinking. I sense there is a (subtle) propaganda campaign against him?Schopenhauer — schopenhauer1
Happiness is not what is intrinsic, but rather dissatisfaction is — schopenhauer1
Boredom is seen as the ultimate revealer of a ground-state of dissatisfaction as he argues this to be the "proof" that we are not simply satisfied existing, but always rather dissatisfied. — schopenhauer1
not even getting to the game of satisfaction-fulfilling.. Just maintaining the lifestyle to get there. — schopenhauer1