.I don't know, I might go to hell or heaven, the underworld of Greek myths, or eaten by Egyptian afterlife monsters, or even merely go from one folder to another folder, if we are inside a giant simulation.
.All I know is that, when you're not content with your life, and deem it too trivial to begin caring about, it's nothing but a big, yet brave, risk to take.
.It might get worse if there's an afterlife and we don't reside in blackness (I still don't understand how there can't be oblivion, you go there every night when you sleep).
.But it's only sensible to take action to improve your life, even if it ultimately ends up hurting you
Do you think you can prove that 1+1=2?
.“…and suicide might satisfy you?
.
How?” — Michael Ossipoff[/i]
.
Imagine that you've just bought a new gaming console, with two brand new games. You put the first disk in. You get so immersed in this game that you don't notice how much time has passed, you are thoroughly enjoying it, it's been a long time since you've had this much fun with a game.
And now you put the second disk in. 10 mins in and you already know how much of a crappy and generic game it is, with no substance in it, it's just there for no apparent reason.
What would you do with the second video game? Keep playing it until you compulsively convince yourself that you like it? Or do you rationally delete the damn game?
life for some is the first video game but for most it's the second one.
"Is this just philosophical Nihilism, or is there something about your particular life-situation that makes your own particular life inadequate for you?" — Michael Ossipoff
to answer that question, I think it'd be better if we chatted somewhere than here. Google hangouts is a great choice — Rhasta1
.I feel deeply unhappy (and ethically perturbed) with the fact that I am (and others are) having horrible experiences and that any experiences including these I did not consent to initially.
.I feel life is immoral for two main reasons.
.The first reason is because of all the clear problems in the world
.…and the second is the lack of consent when bringing new beings here.
.I don't think being alive or being dead are in my interest.
It seems to me that death eradicates point and meaning because only the living can have desires.
Death disconnects the individual from her wishes and goals. — Andrew4Handel
You cannot connect back with the world after you are dead( it seems) to see what happened to the world in your absence. — Andrew4Handel
.”If you don't have any wants, then why would there be a reason to do anything?” — Michael Ossipoff
.
I quite haven't figured out whether life is incapable of satisfying me in any way
., or there's something out there that will make me more at ease. And I'm searching to see if the latter could be true
.”Approaching nothing, sure, but never getting there” — Michael Ossipoff
.
all the things that you mentioned prior to this sentence were true and made sense, but i dont understand their correlation with this statement "Approaching nothing, sure, but never getting there"
Why has there gotta be anything [in your experience] but blackness and simply ceasing to exist?
.”Say you eventually die naturally, or by physically-necessary auto-euthanasia or requested-euthanasia, because of a disease or injury that spoils your quality-of-life. That isn’t suicide, and it isn’t a bad death. —“ Michael Ossipoff
.
But I'd like to argue that euthanasia, self-requested, is a form of suicide nevertheless.
.See, people who take their own lives, teenage girls [only girls?] or unemployed dudes, are suffering to an extent which is unendurable for them. They don't kill themselves because their boyfriends broke up with them or they lost their job, they suffer because the value of their lives, which was based on careers or a loving relationship, shatter and they seem unable to find any reason to why they have got to continue the futile existence.
.
And in my opinion, this kinda existential crisis is far more painful and excruciating than any kind of cancer or disease
., and only a madman would linger on their lives.
.Unnecessarily ending one’s life by destroying one’s body would be the ultimate device-malfunction, self-denial, self-hate, and misery-preservation. …attempting to end misery and discontent, but instead bringing it with you.” — Michael Ossipoff”
I just don't understand why people have got to hate themselves to commit suicide? I don't understand this notion at all.
i gotta live if i wanna play guitar and fall in love, and if i don't want anything, suicide is the best option — Rhasta1
Within the context of possible experience......
Empirical truth: that of which the negation is impossible. — Mww
Logical truth: that of which the negation is contradictory.
Do you remember the short version of the explanation I gave as to why my unwillingness or inability to do so is unimportant? — S
Whether I can or can't, defining it isn't necessary if we understand the meaning, which we do.
You keep getting point number three wrong, by the way, in spite of my corrections. — S
3. S. then said that that term has a meaning, though he’s either unable or unwilling to say what it is. — Michael Ossipoff
Why then do you appear to find such a simple point so complicated that you cannot understand it? — S
.You need to read more Wittgenstein.
That reply of yours doesn't progress the debate or engage productively. It merely reasserts premises I rejected ages ago.
Incorrect. It ended with me informing you that I was going to ignore you, because we reached a dead end whereby you kept asking me to do something which is demonstrably unnecessary - provide a definition - and thus a waste of my time, and I had already explained that. The meaning is understood by both of us, but the difference is that I don't pretend otherwise for the sake of pushing some rubbish argument. — S
.Are you saying that because the horrific nightmare knowledge that something really bad has happened would comprise our last moment…
., that a lack of oblivion would somehow perpetuate this subjective moment into eternity?
.How can you know for sure that there's no such thing as oblivion, absolute silence and blackness?
.Oblivion sounds like nothing, but it can give you that nothing else can, peace of mind.
.I'd love it if you could tell me why you think that oblivion is nothing but an illusion.
Sounds like Rod Serling opening an Outer Limits episode. — Mww
suicidal is nothing but an option to extract early if you do not like this game, this labyrinth that God or the gods have put forward.
its highly ironic to me that god gave us this life that sucks in every level and get mad if we don't play by the rules — Rhasta1
If we take the assumption that God is good, then whence came evil?
If we take the assumption that God is all knowledgeable then, he will know every single action, and permutation that is possible...he will know that it is possible for for a being to kidnap and torture to death someone who meant only good to the beings they came into contact. He will know that the torturer was once an innocent being himself, and fell to an existence of destruction.
And that is just a glimpse of what he knows. — wax
.Life is the big old monster that is the basis of all else
.- including suffering.
.Not being born hurts literally no one.
.We should all be against procreation. It is what causes the suffering. I don't equate suffering itself with procreation, we all know that procreation inevitably leads to suffering. The great human project can be that which unites us against the principle of procreating more life. This can be our great cause. It is an inversion of the usual trope that life is always good- including the pain. Humanity can finally say, "ENOUGH!" and do something about it, by non-action - that is to simply not have future people.
.”Incorrect. I explained the difference in the text that followed what you quoted from me above. You left out that part.
.
I refer you to that part of my post. …the part that spoke of why we usually know what someone means, but why the terms “Real”, “Exist” and “There is” are different in that regard.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
You said that we usually know what people mean when they use terms in context. I used terms in context.
Therefore, what I meant is something which is usually understood. You're either an exception to your own rule or you're just pretending.
.
This discussion is testament to the understanding of what I asked. Most, if not all, other people understood what I meant. That's why we're having a discussion about it, instead of everyone just responding like, "What? I have no idea what you just asked", as though I was speaking in my own made up gibberish.
Look at how many people voted in the poll. Would you vote in a poll when you had no idea what it was asking?
.”You really need to spend a bit more time checking what you’ve written before you post it.
.
Yes, you asked if there would be that rock.
.
Does it occur to you that your question about “Would there be…” used the interrogative conditional form of “There is…”? “— Michael Ossipoff
.
And...?
.What's this supposed problem you're having with understanding what I asked?
Why shouldn't I believe that you're feigning ignorance, when that's what the evidence suggests?
.Why shouldn't I believe that you're just dancing around the real issue about whether or not there would be a rock?
."No, I didn’t say that." — Michael Ossipoff
.
If you want to get technical, then yes, you didn't say that. It was logically implied when you said, "defining our terms is necessary". You even quoted yourself saying that.
.That sentence, along with this one, and with the exception of punctuation marks, is composed entirely of terms. Yet I haven't defined these terms I'm using, and nor do I need to, because you obviously understand what I'm saying.
:D You really need to spend a bit more time checking what you’ve written before you post it.” “Exist”, “There is”, and “Real”, without context, intended in some absolute way, are meaningless sounds with which philosophers have befuddled themselves for a long time.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
That is completely beside the point, because that's obviously not what I've done. I didn't just say, "Exist" or "There is" or "Real". I asked if there would be a rock in the situation that I described.
.You know what I asked.
.This is getting more and more ridiculous.
.”But no one here has been able to answer regarding by what they mean by those words, used in the absolute sense with no specified context.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
Right, and they shouldn't do, as that's a challenge that has no relevance in the context I set for this discussion.
.”Yes, defining our terms is necessary. Without that, philosophy becomes meaningless, muddled gibberish.
If you can’t define it, then you don’t know its meaning, and that supports my claim that it doesn’t have one.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
So until I define every term in this sentence, you have no idea what I'm saying.
.”What you’re saying (what you’re asking in your OP question) is meaningless.
.
…and, not having a meaning, it also doesn’t have an understandable meaning.’ — Michael Ossipoff
.
Yet almost everyone else understood it. How peculiar.
So in conclusion..reality is infinite hallucination..appearances without an actual "substance " to them. It's a dream. — Nobody
.”Translation:
“I can’t define it.” “— Michael Ossipoff
.
I went over this. Your reply is nonresponsive and doesn't progress the discussion. Whether I can or can't, defining it isn't necessary if we understand the meaning…
., which we do.
.”1. You point to a cabinet whose contents are unknown, and say “Is a rock there?” “ — Michael Ossipoff
.
And you're going to pretend that you don't understand what is being asked there?
.”2. Or you say “Is there the rock that I referred to, after everyone dies?”. (“Exists that rock?”)” — Michael Ossipoff
.”Those are two entirely different kinds of question, and “There is…” is being used entirely differently, with a different meaning. (..an unknown or absent meaning, in #2)” — Michael Ossipoff
.
The part about existence is no different in either. They're just two different scenarios, two different contexts,
.…and you understand what's being asked in both cases
.”As you meant it when you asked if there still is that rock after everyone has died, “There is” means “Exists”.
.
“Exists that rock, after everyone has died?” accurately translates your question.
.
It’s a matter of whether or not you can define “Exist”. “ — Michael Ossipoff
.
It doesn't make a difference if you use "is" or "exists", as they have the same meaning per my usage here.
.And nope, it's just a matter of whether what I'm saying is understandable…
.”However I don’t know what you mean by “There is…” “— Michael Ossipoff
.
Yes you do, and it's self-explanatory.
.”A metaphysical or ontological question or statement is meaningless if it uses one or more terms that aren’t metaphysically or ontologically defined.”— Michael Ossipoff
.
Poppycock. You know the meaning of "there" and you know the meaning of "is" and you know the meaning of "there is", as in "there is a rock".
.Are you seriously going to pretend otherwise?
.Obviously, if you know the meaning, then there is a meaning there, otherwise you couldn't know it.
.What you're doing amounts to a performative contradiction and is therefore self-defeating. We start from the fact that you understand what I'm saying…
.My main concern is this: there is something different about a person A and an exact copy of that person A1. I don't know what it is. Do you?
.Let's take your thought experiment Michael Ossipoff about a terminally ill person A. We make an exact copy A1 (all physical and mental features included). We then let A die and wake up A1. What is different between A and A1?
.
A has experienced non-existence one might say.
.But what we've done to A and A1 seems very similar to sleep. When we sleep we cease to exist mentally (that's what counts doesn't it?) and then we wake up - there's a discontinuity of mind caused by sleep. So we could in fact say that a person dies in his sleep only to wake up as another.
.The only thing that seems to ground our identity is memory - we remember what happened before we slept. Of course our physical appearance too doesn't change.
.
Therefore, it seems, based on the analysis above, that A1 is A (A has been cured of his fatal disease) and we can rightly call A1 as A.
.Now let's look at it from a moral standpoint. Suppose A had commited a crime but he ''dies'' before he can be punished. A1, by analysis above, is A since he has the memory of the crime and is an exact copy of A. Yet, it seems intuitively wrong to punish A1 for A's crime. It's just that A1 has A's memories. He didn't actually commit the crime.
.Here we are. One point of view suggests A is A1 and another that suggests the opposite.
There could be a number of people identical to you, indistinguishable by anyone. But there’s one person who’d know that there others aren’t you. You’d know.
.”The question is meaningless, because "Exist" and "Real" aren't metaphysically defined.
.
We tend to believe in our metaphysicses too devoutly.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
Firstly, I didn't even use those words.
.Secondly, I don't believe that you didn't understand what I meant.
.And thirdly, even if you didn't understand what I meant, it doesn't follow that what I said was meaningless.
There is a rock, but no one is there to perceive it, because we all died an hour previously. Is there a rock? Yes or no? — S
.”If you could be transported to those other places and times, and met those people identical to people you know here, of course you'd say that they're the original person you knew.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
Why can't there be 2 you's?
.All, reincarnations could be the same person.
.Strangely there seems to be something about identity I'm missing. Imagine there are two identical people X and Y coming into existence by the process I described in the OP. When X dies then Y would continue to exist, meaning, in some way, that X hasn't actually died.
.Yet, when you think of it X has become nonexistent and something has changed.
Is this reincarnation? — TheMadFool
Since there is no possible way, for instance, to tell apart you dead and gone and the new person who is exactly like you in mind and body, we would be forced to say you were reborn.
What are some metaphysical prerequisites to becoming an antinatalist?
Atheism, right?
— Roke
Nihilism, but not quite... more like a desire for nihilism
What positions are incompatible?
Theism
Agnosticism
.”But you should resist the inclination to mock beliefs different from your own.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
I don't have any beliefs, that is what atheism is all about, not have them.
.But I did not mock him, I told him what he wanted to hear. And he was happy with it until you burst the bubble.
.”Just briefly, remember that you don't know all the Theists or the beliefs of all Theists, — Michael Ossipoff
.
I have little interest in knowing and it makes little difference.
.”What you do know, and should feel free to say, is that you don't know of evidence for, or reason for faith about, what someone else believes. Saying that, vs saying that there's no evidence, or no reason for faith--Those are two different kinds of statements.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
Basically all I have ever said is that I have never heard convincing evidence to support peoples religious beliefs.
.”A little humility and modesty would be good, and that's something missing from our aggressive-Atheist brothers.” — Michael Ossipoff
.
For someone that takes it upon himself to preach to others about sinning…