I am the evil and scorned antinatalist and pessimist that you all revile.. pleased to see everyone in good form here. I thought I'd make an appearance to add some perspective from the antinatalist side. Carry on with your circle jerking, if you must, but keep in mind several things. — schopenhauer1
I do not revile your opinions, but I must say this in advance of my dissection of your argument as I take it that there is a slight stab in my direction that perhaps requires some elucidation. To be 'emotional' is ambiguous, but the ontology of emotions enable existence to have substance and whilst perhaps the state is a neuro-psychological experience, it nevertheless provides us with a unique and intuitive process that coordinates a response to and relationship with the external world; it gives meaning to experience and is foundational to empathy and thus ultimately moral consciousness.
But there is an ambiguity in our understanding of the sentiment. The first and broadly understood - i.e. the
boo friggidy hoo my life is shit emotions - is only bad insofar as the individual does not actively engage in making those circumstances better and if they are able to articulate it, then they are able to improve it. I am not fond of this type of emotion, it is too static, defeatist and unchanging for my taste.
The other, however, the
this situation is unbearable and it needs to stop emotion is, to me, extremely important. Martha Nussbaum' account of compassion and emotion and her use of her own personal experiences as part of her thesis exemplifies how important such sentiments are, her and another favourite of mine Raimond Gaita' object-directedness through personal experience in books like The Philosophers Dog or Romulus, My Father. It is what makes us
humane and to understand love or to be loving. As Nussbaum claims, our lack of emotions or appropriate emotional responses actually show that our response to and actions with the world can be hindered and thus our first and primary focus should be about articulating and correctly understanding ourselves.
When I was studying my PhD, my supervisor was so profoundly controlling in his attempt to dissuade my use of a similar methodology (he was a Marxist) that he referred to mine as being 'too feminine' and claimed that anything without a strict, clear, black and white reality was too 'emotional' and thus lacked legitimacy. I dropped out because at the time I thought he may be right.
He could not have been more wrong. Compassion and the passion for things like human rights, justice, righteousness and where I feel an inherent disdain for crimes against humanity, for the abuse of women and children, the lack of inequality, they are not a weakness but a strength. To use my own personal experience to exemplify this strength is comparatively what makes the OP sensible in his approach. So, you can call it 'circle jerking' but really, you are being the jerk here.
You can say as a society, the de facto non-intentional, yet emergent goal is to perpetuate social institutions by using individuals as inadvertent vehicles in which to enact another life of socially derived survival, comfort-seeking, and entertainment-seeking activities (which in turn strengthens social institutions, and so on). — schopenhauer1
Erich Fromm wrote: "Love is the only sane and satisfactory answer to the problem of human existence.” Our motivation or will to happiness and the experience of euphoria is identified and conditional with external objects or an implicit target to make the experience intelligible. A study of children in
Romanian orphanages in the 1990's shows that the inhumane and extremely minimal contact with adults where no affection or emotion had ever been experienced actually alters the brain. We can give food, shelter, all the necessities to 'live' but that is not where 'life' manifests. The cognitive mechanisms that affect emotional expressions is modelled during developmental stages by characterising psychological content and sometimes this content is unconscious and not clearly understood and so projected incorrectly or what we refer to as mental health concerns like hysteria or sociopathy. How we express that needn't be violent or highly visible; a sociopath who has shut-off completely can still appear to live a normal life.
Are you implying that love - and again, not that sentiment of a mushy romance but think of 'brotherly love' when I say it or the capacity to
give love (emotion/compassion) - as a Will that drives us, are you suggesting the endeavour to reach happiness by regulating and correctly applying our emotions and by being passionate against injustice or bad things happening to others, that contains no 'purpose'? As you say:
So humans need to be born so that they can learn to not make as many mistakes? — schopenhauer1
Humans don't
need to be born at this stage; I openly told a woman at work who said that she spent $50,000 on IVF treatment that she was an idiot. We have more than enough children being born for the wrong reasons that need our attention (love, compassion, empathy, they are emotions that connect us) and why I myself do not wish to give birth but will (in the future) adopt a child. There is no 'black and white, strict, clear' reality here; IVF treatment and anti-natalism are two extremes and what we need is to apply ourselves with more humanity, compassion and knowledge that modifies our recalcitrant emotions and project it correctly to the external world, to direct the implicit and subjective experience to - as Searl said -
direction of fit.