Ooh, burn! :fire: — apokrisis
Do you mean how does causality as imagined by physics relate to causality as imagined by logic? Do they share the same root or are they antithetic? — apokrisis
Aren't any liberals righteously angry about all this chicanery going back to 2016 and 2020? — fishfry
Philosophers such as Kant, JS Mill, J. Rawls, and most likely Nietzsche laid down the foundation of their conception of morality. — L'éléphant
On some views, the relevant "form of life," is something common to all humanity. It is something like "what we all share by virtue of being human and of living in the same world." Advocates of this perspective often pay a lot of attention to Wittgenstein's comments on pain. When it comes to pain, it seems to be our natural expressiveness, something we share with other mammals, that is the scaffolding on which language about pain is built. — Count Timothy von Icarus
With Schopenhauer, compassion is all-apart of the same manifesting premise. That is to say, if the world is Will, individuated into an illusory version of itself (the manifold beings of the world), then a saintly person is driven from the feeling of "fellow-suffering" of all the manifold beings. That is to say, they can feel this agapic love and then act upon it. The acting upon this feeling is saintly compassion for Schop, and this has the effect of making one less individuated. — schopenhauer1
In the fact that you are answering Shawn, I agree. He does seem to be a case of overthinking, living in a basement, wallowing in it (didn't he have a theme of this with his piggy stuff?).. making a sort of cliche out of Schopenhauer only being for the depressed and inert. — schopenhauer1
And then I added in a more "meta" sense of suffering pace Ligotti. That is to say, we are a species that evolved like the rest of nature, but yet is not in a "balance of nature". Where other animals have a form of life that is instinctual, ours is by-far more deliberative, which adds another burden uniquely human. This is what I mean by "forms of life". — schopenhauer1
Humans can form narratives to suit any rataionale they want to get to... So if life is supposed to be X, Y, Z, they will develop a story to provide it that rationale. These are all justifications for why we (must) pursue X, Y, and Z. But the fact is that our very ability to form counterfactuals and diverse narratives tells us that we don't have to have this rationale. That it is indeed only a rationale...That we are the species that needs a rationale.. We don't just "do", we know we do and we have provide reasons for why we do. — schopenhauer1
I'm trying to say that there are various "coping mechanisms" that people use to ignore the notion of suffering in life, and thus the need for empathy in the Schopenhaurian fashion is not even considered. — schopenhauer1
I'm not asking your opinion on "the will to live", rather I am pointing that you are questioning it. And even now, we can debate it, giving reasons for enjoining with it. — schopenhauer1
You are questioning it right now. Isn't this your answer, the germination of which is in your very inquiry? Why is nature creating creatures that question the "will to live"? — schopenhauer1
So yes, in a way, Schopenhauer's compassion for the human condition, and suffering makes sense. — schopenhauer1
Magee says in his book on Schopenhaur that his pessimism was more an aspect of his disposition than of his philosophy. — Wayfarer
I am inclined to hold that the foundation of morality is more deeply rooted in emotional affectivity than in rational deliberation. — Tom Storm
Vanity and pride? What you are suggesting seems to correspond to sociopathy, which is often so indifferent towards others that vanity and pride may be irrelevant to its experience. Perhaps you are hinting at hedonistic narcissism? — Tom Storm
I don't see how there would be a 'proper' way to talk about ethics? This seems rigid. — Tom Storm
Are you suggesting that our experience of humanity or of being is enough to allow us to be fully are of our common humanity in some way? — Tom Storm
Do you have reason to believe in moral facts? — Tom Storm
Don't overlook the fact that Schopenhauer accepted there was a mode of existence beyond suffering. — Wayfarer
Our experience of suffering is inscribed in a chain of signification that the self, the ego, cannot dominate. — JuanZu
Only language-using "sentient beings" seem to do so. To wit:
I am afraid we are not rid of God because we still have faith in grammar.
— Friedrich Nietzsche — 180 Proof
An observational axiom of ethics: suffering – species-specific defects which make individual species-membrrs vulnerable to dysfunction – is the most basic moral fact and thereby knowing how to decrease or increase the likelihood and severity of dysfunction is thereby the most practical moral truth. — 180 Proof
adaptive habits (i.e. virtues) — 180 Proof
A real world example is often hard to parse into material implication -- sometimes, yes, but sometimes it's hard -- the conjuncts of disjuncts, while they can be claimed, is even rarer :D
Though after we dismiss "B and not-B" as always false, we can see that the truth of the proposition will only rely upon A, since "implies" is logically equivalent to "not-A or (B and not-B)", and the truth of a disjunct is true if one of the propositions is true -- so if not-A is true then it is true, and if not then it is false -- since not all results in the truth-table are false it is not a contradiction. — Moliere
Can anyone think up a real world example where you would point out that A implies both B and not-B except for saying something along the lines of:
"A implies B and not-B, therefore clearly not-A." — Count Timothy von Icarus