Well, correct. That is the whole point. The child doesn't need to exist to experience adversity, period. It would be wrong to expose someone to adversity, just so they can experience overcoming it. Even if the premise was true that, "overcoming adversity makes one stronger", no one needs to be exposed to adversity in the first place. It is wrong to make someone overcome adversity when they didn't need to. — schopenhauer1
The question is if it is right to procreate a new person who will experience adversity. — schopenhauer1
Oh? — Bitter Crank
Who are you to judge for someone else what is "adverse" enough for them, psychological or not? — schopenhauer1
How do you know to what extent that person would want to experience adversity? — schopenhauer1
How do you know there won't be more than small adversity but perhaps the possibility of undo suffering will occur? — schopenhauer1
If the navel-gazing Buddhist is likened to the potential child that does not need to exist (to be exposed to suffering/adversity) in the first place, then the person who comes along and figures that this navel-gazer needs to overcome adversity is like the parents procreating a new human into existence where they surely will experience adversity, and they will have to overcome it. Then, in Nietzschean fashion will claim that the point of living is to get stronger by overcoming life's challenges. This makes little sense if no one existed to need adversity in the first place. Don't take the analogy too seriously- it is simply to show the illogic of it. — schopenhauer1
Yes, I agree it is. That is the whole point of the analogy. — schopenhauer1
I do not get what you are asking. — schopenhauer1
Did you read the whole post? — schopenhauer1
The point of it is if someone feels the Buddhist needs to go through adversity, and thus exposes him to a situation of adversity, is this wrong? — schopenhauer1
This person decides that the meditative Buddhist needs to stop navel-gazing and start living a "real" life — schopenhauer1
Formally, there is no problem with it. I have never seen a philosophical criticism that was compelling either. — Snakes Alive
I'm not suggesting you start with anything more than quite small efforts. I picture you as being in your house most of the time. A worthwhile goal would be to go outside for a short walk every day. Do you do things of that sort? Do you have a yard in which you could mess around with? Plant some seeds, watch them grow. — Bitter Crank
One is about the report of the thing, the other is about the thing. Sometimes we talk about the report. Is that not the thing in those cases? — creativesoul
There are a whole host of ways to help other people. — Bitter Crank
Afghanistan needs such common vision. I propose a post-islamic, civilized (not religious, not tribal) vision for all Afghans. Invent a new national meta-narrative and sell it to the people. — DiegoT
Well, is your desire to chart a path from what you find unacceptable "psychobabble" ? — Valentinus
Strictly speaking, in terms of what you have quoted of my remarks, I am just rephrasing your observation that there is little satisfaction in only pursing material goods alone. — Valentinus
Have I misunderstood you? — Valentinus
The automacy evident in consumerism or the "fetishism of commodities", if you will, points to a process that cannot fulfill our deepest needs. — Valentinus
Well I dont know you, so its hard to say whats best. Aligning my values with other peoples values doesnt make me happy, it makes me unhappy. But that's me. All I can offer is that if your having trouble aligning your values to other peoples values, maybe thats whats different about you and you might do better to just do your own thing. — DingoJones
hare what values you must with others to honor yiur social contracts but shed those values thst ferl burdensome.
Im probably not the best candidate to give you insight here, Rank seems to have ready answers for you though. :) — DingoJones
It's a very nice post, Wallow, but why not pick at it? — tim wood
In taking a "methodological approach," you're already presupposing a set of concerns and an entire argument about them. — tim wood
Um, well, what does Wittgenstein say, if anything, about logic and symbolic logic including maths? I'm asking, not arguing. — tim wood
If you're defining a region; i.e., that which falls within Wittgenstein's bailiwick, then so far you've indicated a region of concerns, but not ground or anchors. — tim wood
Bewitchment? Ok, but how does Wittgenstein break the spell - or does he? — tim wood
I've heard it said that the history of philosophy just is philosophy. — tim wood
I've read enough to encounter for myself the encounter of ideas, enough to know that many so-called insights are in substance reactions to something, borrowing strength, as it were, from that which they oppose, and in particular lacking strength to stand independently. I take Descartes and scholastic realism to be a thinker and a thinking, each of which had their day, but that now belong to the history rather than the current concerns of philosophy. — tim wood
In my opinion, it would be worthy instruction if you could lay out one example of such a question or problem, and its dissolution, it it has been "dissolved." — tim wood
Wallows: One of the ways you ARE different from many people is that you are drilling deeper into the reality of your life than most people do. It's a risky exercise. Do it anyway, but pay attention to #5: make connection with other people. Sorry, the cure for alienation isn't quite as simple as plugging in a toaster. — Bitter Crank
1. Egotism and selfishness are in our genes. — Bitter Crank
2. Just because people want more stuff doesn't mean that not wanting stuff will make them content. — Bitter Crank
3. You are not all that unique. "The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation." (Henry David Thoreau, American Transcendentalist) — Bitter Crank
4. The Human Condition is, in fact, a sad state of affairs a good share of the time. — Bitter Crank
5. Alienation is a wretched feeling. Making connections to other people is the antidote. — Bitter Crank
Try answering. If Wittgenstein is your answer (god alone knows how!) then make your case. — tim wood
You lost me, how do those things connect to your other posts? There is alot going on in that last post, but Im not sure it relates to what im saying. — DingoJones
The question of this OP is, what, for you, are your anchors in your thinking-about-thinking, which is what I take philosophy to be? Or another way, when you're done, how do you know you've done anything other, or more, than merely entertain yourself? — tim wood
Well, you said you were different. If you reflect on exactly how, you can begin to live according to whatever standards suit you. — DingoJones
It seems like right now you are burdened by some social programming that doesnt suit you. Get rid of it, and the disphoria should go along with it. — DingoJones
You wont be alienated from everyone, at least I find it hard to imagine you cant relate to anyone at all. — DingoJones
Social contract theory has a decently accurate wikki entry to get you started. Its basically a simple way of viewing the kinds of interactions you are talking about but without the baggage of sweeping principals that humans burden each other with. — DingoJones
There is security in those burdens for some, but perhaps you are the kind of person who doesnt get much out if it and are in the process of realizing that. — DingoJones
Its ok to not feel connected to that stuff, you should embrace the alienation. — DingoJones
It will liberate you to live according to your own values, and you can figure out for yourself how you want to and to what degree you want to be connected with the rest of mankind. — DingoJones
I recommend social contract theory to start. — DingoJones
"We have enough. We are satisfied. I can live with one car instead of two. I do not need luxury toothpaste. Eating meat twice a week, instead of seven, is enough for me." — Tzeentch
You really should ask and look how absolute povetry was eradicated in various countries, how countries that have been poor have gotten more affluent. And we've seen the biggest reduction in absolute povetry in the World during this era. Even if charity is a good thing, seldom has some voluntary charity been the answer in eradicating povetry historically. — ssu
With the Betrand Russell quote, well, just what concrete solutions does it give? Because that is what we need, concrete answers to real problems. Usually people aren't happy with the answers at all. — ssu
