What Russia became after Stalin was the devolution of the Stalin era. The satellite states more or less broke away but inherited the basic structure of government and its agencies. He had set up the apparatus, which is still working for Putin. In between, a few dozen capitalists, abetted by local sharks, amassed fortunes and a swarm of opportunistic religious zealots wrought havoc with people's stupefied minds. Still not a whole lot to do with communism.Seems like bashing on Stalin really dismantles whatever the Soviet Union was or became after him. — Shawn
What is the individual to the collective? If it has been collectively decided to aim for happiness on an collective level, then what meaning could individual happiness mean to anyone? — Shawn
- VOLUME I. A RETROSPECT. Chapter XI. RACE AND PEOPLE — Tarskian
Why he was going to go to war with Russia: — Tarskian
If it has been collectively decided to aim for happiness on an collective level, then what meaning could individual happiness mean to anyone? — Shawn
This is such an odd formulation.
Let us try the experiment. Let us collectively agree to aim for happiness. I think the first thing we need is a constitution that expresses our agreement and constitutes the formal foundation of the collective. Are we all happy to do that? All those in favour say "aye "and call yourselves "founding Fathers (and Mothers)".
It's a bit of a fairytale, but do notice that it is a Good Old American Fairytale, not Mr Nasty's Fairytale. — unenlightened
If it has been collectively decided to aim for happiness on an collective level, then what meaning could individual happiness mean to anyone?
— Shawn
This is such an odd formulation. — unenlightened
The happy man is the one who has the stable positive regard of his neighbours. If one really understands this, one understands that there is no conflict, because the happiness of the individual is only to be found in the happiness of the collective. Life becomes much simpler and happier. — unenlightened
The pursuit of happiness, conceived as an individual right, immediately invites the individual to calculate and measure himself and his own happiness in relation to the rest of society. Thus the pursuit becomes a 'beggar your neighbour' affair, and life a competition. Every day one is reminded "there can only be one winner", One does not seem to register that every winner is dependent on a slew of losers. — unenlightened
Yet, the reality of the situation is that the good Samaritan suffers because of the atomization of society, and hence hell is other people, the game becomes more refined and there is no room for compassion or sympathy. — Shawn
Being and nonbeing produce each other.
The difficult is born in the easy.
Long is defined by short, the high by the low.
Before and after go along with each other.
So the sage lives openly with apparent duality
and paradoxical unity.
The sage can act without effort
and teach without words.
Nurturing things without possessing them,
he works, but not for rewards;
he competes, but not for results.
When the work is done, it is forgotten.
That is why it lasts forever. — Tao Te Ching:2
What is the individual to the collective? If it has been collectively decided to aim for happiness on an collective level, then what meaning could individual happiness mean to anyone?
Was the failure of communism mainly due to pursuing happiness not as a methodology or process; but, as the final goal of the system itself? I find it hard to interpret this ad hoc argument any differently, than to say that communism failed due to pursuing happiness and collectivism too stringently, while forgetting how such an aim could be attained methodologically.
What are your thoughts on the matter? — Shawn
To this I'll add that egalitarian ideals (be they communistic, anarchistic, or democratic) entwine the ideal of symbiotic happiness among all, whereas totalitarian ideals can only be about zero-sum happiness by necessity of what totalitarianism prescribes. — javra
Aristotle really set in motion the telos of human aspirations, which is quite a sad state of affairs. — Shawn
Human collective goals shouldn't be defined by what standardized method or aims people have for themselves. If it really has to be Marx, then to each his/her own, right? Of course this is the end goal of communism, but is 'to each their own' too idealistic? — Shawn
What do you think about this whole history of eudaimonia and the pursuit of happiness? — Shawn
And, of course, I detected the antithesis being secular philosophies like Buddhism, which simply seek tranquility and a reduction of suffering. — Shawn
In the Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra, the Buddha speak of four attributes which make up nirvana. Writing on this Mahayana understanding of nirvana, William Edward Soothill and Lewis Hodous state:
'The Nirvana Sutra claims for nirvana the ancient ideas of permanence, bliss, personality, purity in the transcendental realm. Mahayana declares that Hinayana, by denying personality in the transcendental realm, denies the existence of the Buddha. In Mahayana, final nirvana is both mundane and transcendental, and is also used as a term for the Absolute.[221] — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana_(Buddhism)#Mah%C4%81parinirv%C4%81%E1%B9%87a_S%C5%ABtra
If so, it's still the pursuit of eudemonia by other names and frameworks. Not so different in this regard. Just saying. — javra
"Potential failure"? Being charitable, I will suppose you think and express yourself a lot more precisely in your native language, and give you credit for your efforts in English. As it sits, however, yours a disgusting absurdity. Or maybe you're fourteen years old and going through a phase of adolescent power worship. Being likely the third greatest murderer in history, behind God and Mao and ahead of Hitler, he was either on his own terms a spectacular success or a complete failure - nothing potential or half-way about it. 40 million killed is 1,000 per day, every single day, for 110 years.That and he killed 40 million people.
— Hanover
That is indeed a potential failure. The goal is to subdue. — Tarskian
The title of the thread is actually a slogan from the Soviet Union. — Shawn
Shawn: Are you happy and contented? — BC
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