• Slaves & Robots
    What I want to bring to your attention is a rather simple fact. Slavemasters were treating human slaves back when slavery was the norm the same as we intend to treat robots in the future. The sentience of human slaves was completely ignored i.e. human slaves were treated as if they weren't sentient. In other words human slaves were equivalent to robots for all intents and purposes.

    Thus, I was just curious about how all of us - white, yellow, black, and brown - having a family history of slavery would feel about using robots because there's no difference between slaves and robots. The fact that slaves were/are sentient human beings is irrelevant because they were treated as if they weren't. That's the whole point of slavery and robotics - in the latter case, sentience is absent and in the former case, sentience is deemed absent.
    TheMadFool

    Yes.

    What I'm seeing here are two things:
    1. You display more sympathy and empathy for other people than average humans.

    2. Your line of reasoning seems to work on the premise that people (should) internalize the identity as ascribed to them by others.
    E.g. that if a slave owner believes that slaves are in some essential way subhuman, and expects his slaves to believe this about themselves, that the slaves will or should believe it.

    To what extent is one what other people claim that one is?

    A person's identity is not autonomous, and is to an extent determined by other people's claims about said person's identity. One cannot escape other people's ideas about who one is.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    I don't think Trump's fascination for Putin is anything more than one inflated roid-ridden bodybuilder admiring an even more inflated roid-ridden bodybuilder standing nearby in the gym.Tom Storm

    No. Putin cares about ruling a country. Very few high politicians nowadays care about ruling. Most are just intoxicated with holding a position of power, or with getting the benefits that being so high up gets them and their cronies. In some countries, to begin with, the political system is set up in such a way that prevents the accumulating of much power in the hands of one person or one party, so politicians in those countries can't focus on ruling even if they wanted to.

    But Putin is an old-school ruler. As a personality, he thus simply can't be very pleasing. But he rules.



    (I suspect part of the problem with Putin are his face and his demeanor -- Slavic-Mongolian. Westerners generally aren't used to those races and can't read those faces properly.)
  • Not exactly an argument for natalism
    on those distractions. If those are gone, those people crumble under the futility of the task.

    The real feat would be to face the boulder and the mountain sober, focused, fully aware of the futility of the task.

    Humility can take one only so far.
  • Not exactly an argument for natalism
    (Sorry, technical problems, the edit button doesn't work from my phone.)

    Being able to calmly endure all kinds of hardship is the holy grail for many people.

    Those who seem to be succeeding at it do so by relying on distractions, and not because they had found a way to master hardship. Their success" depends
  • Not exactly an argument for natalism
    But if the punishment is eternal, I cannot imagine a situation in which someone could be happy, even if Camus supposes this to be the case.Manuel

    And he made plans to get baptized into the Roman Catholic Church. So much for his integrity.
  • Not exactly an argument for natalism
    There are probably some nearby.frank

    Too bad these happy sisyphuses refuse to share their secret to success!
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    watched Trump meet Putin here. Strange that the US President was a total toadie for the Russian President. It simply is bizarre.ssu

    It's evidence that there is someone who can outsmarten Trump. It's a consolation.
  • Not exactly an argument for natalism
    There is such a thing as a happy Sisyphus. It takes balls to get there.frank

    Really? I'd love to know who are those people.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    Buddhism enters the arena and says what we should really strive for/desire is the changeless, nirvana being the apotheosis.TheMadFool

    No, there is no such universal should in Buddhism. All that the buddhas say is, if you want to be free from suffering, you should do such and such. But beyond that Buddhism is not a religion of commandments the way most other religions are.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    True, Buddhism has no creator God, but it does have many gods and above all else an "omniscient one".Janus

    In Buddhist cosmology, the heaven realms are blissful abodes whose present inhabitants (the devas) gained rebirth there through the power of their past meritorious actions. Like all beings still caught in samsara, however, these deities eventually succumb to aging, illness, and death, and must eventually take rebirth in other realms — pleasant or otherwise — according to the quality and strength of their past kamma. The devas are not always especially knowledgable or spiritually mature — in fact many are quite intoxicated by their sensual indulgences — and none are considered worthy of veneration or worship. Nevertheless, the devas and their happy realms stand as important reminders to us both of the happy benefits that ensue from the performance of skillful and meritorious deeds and, finally, of the ultimate shortcomings of sensuality.

    https://www.accesstoinsight.org/ptf/dhamma/sagga/index.html

    In Buddhism, a deva is not a permanent identity, it's a type of body that one can be born into if one has the merit.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    We respond to the hindrances otherwise they would not hinder us, no? I thought the idea is pretty standard Buddhist fare. I just performed a search and found plenty of references. Here's one on the top of the list:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_hindrances
    Janus

    I have never before heard of "responding to the hindrances". To "respond" to sensual desire, ill will, sloth and torpor, restlessness and worry, and doubt?

    Can you provide a Buddhist source that uses this formulation, "responding to the hindrances"?

    The question is as to whether it is really possible (and desirable) to permanently cease responding to them, i.e. become liberated from them. Why would you try unless you believed it is possible?

    The formulation used in Buddhist sources tends to be "abandoning / overcoming the hindrances". I have never heard "liberated" in this context.

    Why would you try unless you believed it is possible?

    Because you have faith in your teacher's instructions; because you've seen other people succeed in abandoning them; because you have a measure of insight that the hindrances are bad for you, already in a worldly sense, ie. that they hinder you and so it would be good to overcome them; because you've already had some success in abandoning them.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    But I see no reason to think anyone would attempt to give up responding to the five hindrances if they didn't believe that liberation from them is possible.Janus

    Where did you get that phrase "responding to the five hindrances"? I've never heard it before. The hindrances as something to "respond to"?
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    That depends on whether the Buddha of the Pali Canon really was sourgraping or not.
    — baker

    What do you think?
    Tom Storm

    I don't know. The Buddha of modern Buddhism is an entirely different figure from the one in the Pali Canon. To say that there are modern Buddhists who are appaled by the Buddha of the Pali Canon is an understatement.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    It is not ordinary unhappinessJanus

    The reference is to Freud's idea that the goal of psychotherapy is to overcome being neurotically miseable and instead be ordinarily unhappy.

    It is a mix of up and down. I am familiar with the Buddhist idea of learning to cease to respond to the "five hindrances", but you will not be motivated enough to do that unless you have become convinced that liberation from them is actually possible.

    I actually don't know a canonical reference for this. @Wayfarer, do you? How is the order of things-- must one first be convinced that abandoning the hindrances is possible before one can begin abandoning them?
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    — baker

    "sour grapes"
    "bad behavior that happens because someone else is more successful"
    Cambridge Dict
    Hermeticus

    "Sourgraping" refers to the old tale of the fox and the grapes: The fox was eager to eat some grapes, but because they were too high on the vine for his reach, he gave up and disparaged them, saying that they are probably sour anway and not worth the effort.

    I don't think so. Supposedly Siddhartha Gautama was a prince, with a lifestyle to show for it. Pretty clothes, good food, servants and guardians, all that jazz.

    The story goes that he was unhappy despite all that luxury.

    Of course it also depends what you understand as a "life usually lived"?

    Seeking satisfaction in food, drink, sex, work, art.

    Either way, I don't see the Buddha being "sour" about anything.

    By modern standards, he exemplifies antisocial tendencies, depression, and other pathologies.

    Basically, he can be accused of not trying hard enough to find happiness in his marriage, family, work etc.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    Therapists or physicians are not "sourgraping" when they treat, and teach others how to treat, illnesses.180 Proof

    In the case of the Buddha, his solution to the problem of suffering is so radical that it doesn't seem like a solution at all, but, rather, a whole new pathology.

    (Besides music, what could be more life-affirming?)

    Then you're not talking about the Buddha of the Pali Canon.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    Only needed if your demand is to be completely happy all the time.Janus

    If "ordinary unhappiness" is your aim ...
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    what's worse - no understanding of Buddhism or a familiarity with the self-help variety?Tom Storm

    That depends on whether the Buddha of the Pali Canon really was sourgraping or not.
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    For me pleasure or delight is felt in moments, in glimmers of experience.

    Those moments do not have to be permanent to be cherished.
    Tom Storm

    As long as there is an infinite supply of those moments.
  • Is Social Media bad for your Mental Health?
    Is social media making society more mentally ill?TheQuestion

    I think social media and technology in general are lessening the quality of the interpersonal interactions conducted through them, and this lessening of the quality then can have adverse psychological effects.

    Handling the technology takes up too much brain power, so less of it is left for quality of the interpersonal interactions.

    I wrote this on a smsrtphone and I feel like a retsrd now.
  • Death
    There is no downside to death, if one does not see it comingboagie

    But you know it's coming, it's just a matter of time when, and you know it could be anytime.

    You can't fool yourself or buy yourself time.
  • Death
    @Xtrix And you believe you can go gently into that night, a good one even, with no regrets, no desire to continue to be alive?
  • Was the Buddha sourgraping?
    /am currently on a smartphone. Very tedious, can't quote properly. Later./
  • Coronavirus
    @frank

    I checked again: they said the highest daily incidence per million. I'm still looking for a reference and exact number, cumulative statistics take a while.
  • Death
    I think we fear pain and the unknown.

    Just you wait for the pain.

    Two weeks ago, I had to go to the ER, I was in such pain. Gastrointestinal spasms because of a viral infection. I was thinking that death hurts like this, although probably more.
    They gave me IV painkillers ... But without those!!
  • Eternity
    And what is it that is eternal?
    List 3 examples.
  • Does human nature refute philosophical pessimism?
    I don't buy into that assumption that humanity is indeed faced with brute suffering that can't be remedied.[/quote]

    As long as there is eating, consumption of any kind, this long there is going to be suffering.
  • Does human nature refute philosophical pessimism?
    True, but do you ever ponder if the four noble truths are actually true in modern day living?Shawn

    They are timeless, they are not bound to any particular time and place. They are about the nature of existence, not about a particular person or society.

    Had Buddha been born today would he arrive at the same conclusions?

    Of course, provided his father wouldn't lock him up in a mental health institution.
  • Animals are innocent
    My point is that in order for people to treat animals better, people would need to adopt a whole different outlook on life. It's why popular slogans at protests can't possibly make a difference, as they are too particular, have too small a scope.

    It's a philosophy forum, I'm exploring the philosophical question of the nature of rights. The fact that this is so dimly apprehended says something in my view.Wayfarer

    People in general are reluctant to acknowledge the rights of other people or the wellbeing of other people to begin with. It's ... romantic to expect them to extend such consideration to animals when they won't even do it for humans. Generally, people don't believe in the rights of others, regardless what the laws say, so it's no surprise that they don't think about the nature of rights.

    As for the nature of rights: I personally don't believe there exist rights, only privileges, conferred by those with more power onto those with less power, regardless whether those with less power are of the same species as those with more power.
  • Animals are innocent
    So now, religious or philosophical conviction is 'special pleading', and the secular view is normative.Wayfarer

    It depends on whom you want to convince.
  • Animals are innocent
    Ever heard the Buddhist expression, 'this precious human life'? Do you know what that's about? Why human life, in particular, is so designated?Wayfarer

    Because the human form is said to be the one most suitable for attaining enlightenment.
    But, like I said, outside of a religious/ideological context, there is no argument for human uniqueness. Moving the whole discussion into a specific religious/ideological context is a step that requires special justification.
  • Animals are innocent
    but if the uniqueness of h. sapiens is not obvious, then I don't know what argument could be used to establish it.Wayfarer

    Outside of a religious/ideological context, there is no such argument.
  • Animals are innocent
    What would it take to have some form of humane treatment for the animals.Caldwell

    Humans would need to sacrifice some (or much) of their comforts.
    Material ones, such as space and natural resources. And psychological ones, such as the feeling of human superiority over animals.
  • Animals are innocent
    Another facetious remark.Caldwell

    You keep forgetting that resources on planet Earth are limited and that life is a struggle for resources. Humans and animals compete for the same resources.

    Any argument for animal welfare has to take this into consideration. Animal welfare comes at the cost of human welfare. In order for humans to treat animals better, humans would need to sacrifice their own comfort. And for doing this, they would need to have some very good reasons.
  • Coronavirus
    Hm. On the news, they said we currently hold the record.
  • Animals are innocent
    Let's examine the will of the animals. Let's give them the natural proclivity to live in their natural habitat.Caldwell

    And evict humans?
  • Animals are innocent
    What I'm getting at is that if you want to devise a perspective for a better treatment of animals, it will have to be such that is indeed unique for animals; or it will have to be so universal that it will pertain to all living beings.

    With the former, you'd then have to decide upon issues such as whether rats and cockroaches deserve the same good treatment as cows or dogs.

    The latter is so all-encompassing as to be paralyzing.
  • Animals are innocent
    That's why I went back to the basics -- the will, where everyone has equal shot at getting acknowledgement. Animals can't win when we start talking about rationality.Caldwell

    Nor can children, the disabled, Jews, women, blacks, the poor, or any other category of humans that is disenfranchized in any given context.
    IOW, what you're saying about animals is not specific to animals or how humans treat animals; it pertains to categories of humans too.
  • Animals are innocent
    Whereas, I'm arguing that rights pertain to humans, because they are rational agents, and not to animals, because they are not.Wayfarer

    How do you figure that animals are not rational agents? By your human fiat?