Goodness and badness also only exist in our minds, which means they're mental states. — TranscendedRealms
Buddhists advocate achieving a state of nirvana, which is a state of bliss and no suffering. But, my philosophy treats the best bliss as always being the best thing, while Buddhists would treat certain forms of bliss as being bad. For example, they'd treat bliss that results in harm as being bad, even if it was the best bliss. — TranscendedRealms
:100:But what makes pain into suffering is psychological time. Pain is now; suffering is the past pain continuing into the future ... The best bliss of the moment may result in future suffering. — unenlightened
Consider this alternative ego-deflated, consequentialist interpretation of "bliss"...Now, here's one more thing I wish to say about my philosophy, which is that my philosophy says that, even if the achieving the best bliss had harmful consequences, the best bliss would still be the best thing. — TranscendedRealms
I'm curious if you still have that drive to read my entire opening post or not. — TranscendedRealms
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