You asked why I don't like dealing with you, and these kind of remarks are one of several reasons. How is that not inflammatory? I'm sure your response to this will be in the same vein, thus betraying a bit about yourself. — schopenhauer1
Well, a blissful state is probably something along the lines of all preferences being satisfied in the way we want them satisfied. This includes meaning-through-pain, if one so chooses. This also, I guess, includes a certain amount of unexpected pain, that one could stop whenever they wanted and restart if it suited them. Of course, this all sounds like wishful thinking because we are talking utopias here. — schopenhauer1
Since we are the recipient of how it manifests, that is why it matters. The universe isn't for us, but we certainly must deal with what happens to us and thus why it matters to us — schopenhauer1
We can't think ourselves into a purely blissful state where nothing affects us. By definition, if we need to struggle and need some pain for meaning, it is inbuilt. — schopenhauer1
It doesn't mean we can't enjoy things. I never said that (though you might try to strawman me). — schopenhauer1
it is not about a methodology as much as a recognition that there structures of the world that are not good. — schopenhauer1
I am not sure how much asceticism will actually work (or work for most people) in really getting rid of desire or any contingent pains — schopenhauer1
Of course my pessimism comes in with the notion that we must find meaning through struggle, and that we cannot simply be without some source of stimulus or excitation. Existence without any need, desire, goals would simply be enough. However, this is for all intents and purposes an impossibility from the start and incomprehensible as to how that sort of existence even looks like. — schopenhauer1
Metaphysics cannot take criticism and when something does not line up with its preconceived notions it is either brushed off or spun in such a manner as to make it magical. It's basically idealistic bullshit institutionalized. (and that is me being nice) — Mayor of Simpleton
It isn't necessary that you exist but you do, and we can be glad for that. — Bitter Crank
P1 If any gratuitous suffering is preventable and known , it is wrong to allow said gratuitous suffering. — Soylent
Well... I'd say because of the predicating factors that have lead to to things being as they currently are and since these factors have been set into 'motion' they cannot be 'unset' into motion. Much like you cannot really 'unring' a bell once it has been rung. — Mayor of Simpleton
Do you mean 'why' as in having a purpose for doing what it does... as if there is a universal sort of must be a necessity to it all? — Mayor of Simpleton
Why should a regress that is infinite be impossible? — Mayor of Simpleton
Why should determining factors have a limit placed upon them other than the limits of our personal ability to deal with them? — Mayor of Simpleton
Why hold determining factor hostage to our personal limitations of perspective and understanding?
The only reason for a metaphysical "why" as far as I can tell is when we are personally dissatisfied with our place in the universe and wish to make the universe dance according to our wishes. The only reason for a metaphysical "why" being at all necessary is when our ego take the high ground and we wish to think the universe is here and is as it is simply because of ourselves. That's why I tend to call it MEphysics. It is nothing more that an egotistical delusion of megalomania. — Mayor of Simpleton
God is not an answer in any why shape or form. To simply make an appeal to an 'unknowable and invisible product' being sold as the causal agent of anything is not an answer. It changes nothing in terms of understanding, but rather makes a tactical dodging of the issue. — Mayor of Simpleton
Why should pessimism enter the fray at all? — Mayor of Simpleton
From the OP: "If there is an interest to discuss the soundness of the premises, I can create a spinoff thread elsewhere." — Postmodern Beatnik
This is a case where suffering is just suffering. There isn't even a story after-the-fact that could make it such that the condition made the sufferer's life more fulfilling. Here is an example of suffering just being suffering. — schopenhauer1
I don't think free range husbandry followed by the swift killing of animals would constitute gratuitous suffering. — Michael
If you notice, I don't like having dialogues with you, so for my happiness I am not replying. — schopenhauer1
Sure, it is. Pain is intrinsically bad. — The Great Whatever
As to BDSM, first, there is no contradiction in saying people actively seek out or want to inflict bad things on themselves. Second, there is no contradiction in saying that some bad things might be pursued because they are intermixed with good things (i.e., one can find pleasure in pain, but then one must in some sense find the act pleasant, or they are not 'into' BDSM to begin with). — The Great Whatever
Of course you are. This might extrinsically cause some other bad thing, like gaining weight, but that too is only bad insofar as it is somehow painful to have more weight. Put anther way, eating the chocolate is not bad insofar as it is pleasant, but insofar as it causes you to gain weight. To see this, note that the dilemma disappears if the chocolate no longer causes you to gain weight, but is still just as pleasant. — The Great Whatever
Hedonism as such is a claim about the good, and so makes no claims about obligations. — The Great Whatever
So you seem to be making a strange claim here:
1) We cannot control our preferences.
2) The reason we cannot control our preferences is because we cannot control what causes us to suffer.
3) Yet our preferences are in some sense independent from this suffering. — The Great Whatever
Another thing you might mean is what people, when asked, say they approve and disapprove of; but this is clearly of not help, since you can't make something good or bad just by holding a certain opinion or saying it is. — The Great Whatever
If that were true, there would be no problems, since you could just decide to approve of everything that happened and make it good. — The Great Whatever
The reason rape is bad is that it is traumatic and highly painful, both during and for a long period of time afterward. — The Great Whatever
I never said our preferences are always motivated by pleasure. But it does follow, quite obviously, that not all of our preferences are motivated by what is good. — The Great Whatever
You can disagree with whatever you want. But if you disagreed, you would simply be wrong. — The Great Whatever
I would ask you to elucidate your position on what is good, and because it would be internally inconsistent, draw out a contradiction from it. — The Great Whatever
rather, pleasure is good, and hedonism is the recognition of this, and it is true whether you recognize it in a doctrine or not. — The Great Whatever
So it makes no sense to say that what will be of aid to you depends on which philosophy you adopt, if by 'be of aid' you mean 'be good,' and what is good isn't dependent on your philosophical worldview. — The Great Whatever
And yes, Stoicism says pleasure and pain aren't inherently good or bad, but this is wrong. Pleasure and pain are the only things that are good or bad on their own terms. — The Great Whatever
Things like virtue, and so on, are only good in virtue of certain arbitrary opinions, customs, consequences, social norms, etc., and then only insofar as they are efficient causes of pleasure. — The Great Whatever
In other words, virtue is always 'good insofar as...' — The Great Whatever
I can see how Stoicism could be used to ensure people are content even if their empire is abusing them. — schopenhauer1
