I do think that the philosophy of pessimism can probably do this to some extent, almost as a form of consolation. — Jack Cummins
It is interesting that pessimism and asceticism can be linked because in some ways it could give rise to the view that nothing matters and that, therefore, everything is permitted, or this may be more of a modern take on nihilism. — Jack Cummins
I think a bit puzzled why you think that monks are pessimists, and not sure why asceticism comes into the picture necessarily. — Jack Cummins
Old Schop is an arch-pessimist. — 180 Proof
E.M. Cioran, like Samuel Beckett, is much more of an absurdist. Nietzsche & Kafka too. — 180 Proof
It may be possible to think of suffering on a philosophical level when one is enjoying the comforts of daily existence. — Jack Cummins
What I wonder is what happens to the person who adopts the philosophy when he or she comes face to face with suffering on a personal level? — Jack Cummins
I don’t think so. Would be very interested in meeting one but the “thematic discrepancy” would be too much I think. I find that generally, one’s attitude towards life in general is a huge factor in their philosophy. You can’t be optimistic for long while thinking that life is inherently suffering. — khaled
Is not Buddhist doctrine but this isn’t the thread for it. — khaled
I would imagine that it is not that there is a fundamental difference in the nature of the commonplace understanding of pessimism, but more about the depth of the idea. If anything, the history of pessimism and optimism is probably one which weaves its way through the whole of philosophy and other systems of thoughts. It also is behind the scenes of culture and politics. The most extreme version is probably nihilism. One form of it which is probably not the most obvious is in death metal music. You would probably be surprised to know that was the version of it that made me wonder about it.
My own understanding of it takes it as a position of viewing the future with a sense of doom and futility, and an overriding sense that there is no way of finding positive solutions. — Jack Cummins
But since, if the antinatalist is successful in convincing other people not to procreate, the potential future people will not exist anyway, so no compassion or empathy for them, so the point is moot. — baker
Compassion and empathy are meaningful only in relation to already existing entities. — baker
The compassion and empathy you're talking about are idle perversions. — baker
It's empathy and compassion for existing people -- such as for those who are burdened with looking after orphans or the defective. Social norms are there to protect and serve the normal, the majority. — baker
But there are not going to be any future sufferers! — baker
It looks more like the final drop of pleasure that the antinatalist is trying to squeeze out of life. — baker
merely dilettante pessimism. — baker
Yes, we've been over this. I'm not seeing anything special in this. You need to break eggs in order to make an omelette. Most people don't cry over the eggs being broken. — baker
What do you mean by "find comfort"?
Are you saying that you see the futility of life as it is usually lived, but you nevertheless find ways to feel comforted? By what, how? — baker
But proponents of antinatalism are doing the same thing: they want to see other people stop procreating because they (ie. the antinatalists) have a vision that just needs to happen for the other people. — baker
Antinatalism, precisely because of its specific anti-life content, is not a stance that can be backed up by empathy or compassion for other people. — baker
If someone argues for selective natalism/selective antinatalism (as has typically been the case throughout human history, such as in the form of forbidding sex outside of marriage, killing defective newborns, or stigmatizing unwed mothers and their children), then this can still be motivated by empathy or compassion for one of more parties involved. — baker
But with antinatalism, there can be no such motivation -- other than to please the ego of the antinatalist (who will be dead within a few decades anyway, so why care about him). — baker
This is where having experts and advisors that understand the nature of pandemics is important. The president's call shouldn't depend on being able to predict the future since no-one can. — Andrew M
Because not doing it is also harmful. To the people already here. — khaled
If you want to. But that got us nowhere last time. — khaled
Human beings are behavior. — Tom Storm
People being born doesn't really concern me. I am more interested in behavior once they are here. — Tom Storm
They did close the border to China. They just didn't realize that It was in the process of exploding in Italy. COVID19 symptoms may not show up for two weeks after infection. A lot of infected people never have severe symptoms, if any at all. It's mutated into a very contagious pathogen. All these factors allow it to sneak up on a population. — frank
One of the biggest problems early on was a delay in testing created by the CDC. — frank
Hey Schop1!
I got to run to an appointment, let me get back to you cause those are some intriguing thoughts.... — 3017amen
For US that wouldn't have been early enough. Someone would have had to declare it before even the WHO did, and that takes real insight and wisdom that no one had. Imagine someone saying, "Hey let's lock everything down.. this shit is going to be ridiculously deadly.. here's the projection!!" And then having someone take them seriously. And then having people agree with this without someone saying, "You anti-(China, other country) xenaphobe! Or someone saying, "You fuckwit.. you are going to shut down the economy for speculation on this? Look it's way over there!" Well, hindsight is always 20/20 and no one is ever wrong on any of these critical decisions when they were made. — schopenhauer1
That's incorrect. — frank
peak experiences. — Jack Cummins
I'm curious why this matters so much to you. Do you feel you were thrown into the world (apologies to Heidegger) and that this is unfair and has lead to suffering? — Tom Storm
However, I can see the relevance of Maslow's ideas, because he is suggesting that when one need is met this becomes a basis for moving on to the next one up in the hierarchy. Also, it would be easy to compare the whole idea of desires with needs, because both could be seen as arising from the essence of human nature. — Jack Cummins
Not sure what you mean. Shutdowns occur here when there are signs of local transmission. — Banno
What do antinatalists get or hope to get if other people stop producing children? — baker
People see having children as a way to escape from the system. For many people having a child recalibrates who they are and rebuilds the world. — Tom Storm
