SourceAfrica has not done bad. In 50 years they've gone from a pre-Medieval situation to a very decent 100-year-ago Europe, with a functioning nation and state. I would say that sub-Saharan Africa has done best in the world during the last 50 years. Because we don't consider where they came from. It's this stupid concept of developing countries that puts us, Argentina and Mozambique together 50 years ago, and says that Mozambique did worse.
By afropessimism, I mean the "the perception of sub-Saharan Africa as a region too riddled with problems for good governance and economic development."
Cause let's be honest, a lot of Africa is fucked up. Thanks to the first "World" war of the Europeans, the native tribes of Africa were artificially divided based upon European imperialism and not what would be best for Africa and its inhabitants. There have been brutal civil wars in many of these third world countries. Millions have died. Plagues continue to ravage the continent. — darthbarracuda
A typically Western response, of course. The moment people, wherever they are, get a chance to get out of subsistence farming and get washing machines and escape from the social tyrrany of village life, they tend to take it. That's what makes these measures not simply a measure of Westernization: they are not about what is particularly Western. — jamalrob
Could it be, that the Westernized notion is just "the" notion, and all others would more or less have lead to this same version of economic/social relations if they just "developed" first? Is even the idea of progress and development in the fashion that we have today Western or universal? Is development of technology and the culture that surrounds the culture of technology a universal truth that the West hit upon, dragged or converted other cultures into, and should be thanked for doing so? I don't know. — schopenhauer1
I think we also need to consider the huge differences between the many countries in sub-Saharan Africa. — jamalrob
Much of what we acclaim about Western civ is in fact a relatively recent invention. It wasn't so long ago that belief in magic, persecution of "witches," the tortuous death of dissidents and heretics, and so forth were rampant in Western Europe, and autocratic rule was the dominant form of government. Anyone looking at Europe during the time of the Thirty Years War, the Albigensian Crusade, or the Inquisition (in all of its multifaceted cruelty) might wonder if there was any hope for Western Europe.Is there any hope for Africa? — darthbarracuda
Indeed. The fact that Western nations have played an outsized role in foreign aid and assistance to Africa seems to often go unremarked-upon in these discussions. Private and public philanothropy has spent vast amounts of money in combating disease in Africa, for instance, fighting malaria, river blindness, Guinea worm, HIV, and Ebola, among others.I seriously doubt that the entire plight of Africa can be blamed on Western imperialism either, which seems to be the thrust of the OP and many of the responses — Hanover
I am all for the hastening of the non-West to become more Westernized and more technological as soon as possible, so we can all be on the same page to understand Philosophical Pessimism and antinatalism. — schopenhauer1
Right. As soon as an African mother has a pot to piss in, she starts reading Schopenhauer, wondering why she bothers to have children, and doesn't just get it over with by using her machete to chop off her own head. — Bitter Crank
If I were to be accepted in a previously uncontacted tribal society — schopenhauer1
Or, is it a Hegelian thing? — schopenhauer1
An interesting book you might enjoy, if you can find a copy: Keep the River On Your Right by Tobias Schneebaum, 1969. (Check out on line used book stores like Alibis or ABE.com.) Schneebaum (now deceased) traveled into the jungles of Peru in search of a particular tribe, the Arakmbut, who were presumed to be uncontacted. He found them, and stayed with them for a long time -- accepted. They turned out to be cannibals, and the book includes discussions of flesh eating.
There is no lesson in it about Schopenhauer or Hegel, but he does describe exactly the kind of experience you propose. In time there was more contact, the tribe caught numerous diseases to which they had not been previously exposed, and their quality of life took a nose dive. — Bitter Crank
"Improvements" in the quality of life -- electricity, indoor toilets, better food, less disease... seem to be paired with a decline in the quality of life -- assembly lines, piece work, ruthless exploitation, low pay... The better things get, the worse they are. What Marx described for 19th century Europe and England occurs all over again in SE Asia. The interpersonal, family, community, religious structures that bind life and meaning together are ripped to shreds by factory life. Farm life was hard, factory life is worse.
Modern industrial life, conducted on its terms, drives people crazy. — Bitter Crank
would they "get" the very notion of choosing to not exist to spare the next generation — schopenhauer1
So is your answer that philosophical pessimism is simply culture? — schopenhauer1
Not quite that simple, no. The philosophical stance one takes is a combination of the cultural resources the culture makes available, one's personality, and one's personal experiences. A neolithic hunter-gatherer band member would have had language, a religious view point of some sort, close human companions, folkways, and the possibility of a more or less pleasant life. — Bitter Crank
The world is the reality that it is — schopenhauer1
There will always be unwanted pains in the world — schopenhauer1
The world imposes on us the needs of survival and unwanted pain in a certain environmental and cultural constraints — schopenhauer1
Our individual wills impose upon ourselves the need to transform boredom into goals and pleasure — schopenhauer1
These "truths" are independent of one's general temperament — schopenhauer1
One cannot choose to turn off their needs and wants- they are a part of their situation — schopenhauer1
The counterarguments that one can just think their way out of the situation seem to not work — schopenhauer1
Does that make me a crypto philosophical pessimist? Maybe, but I am disinclined to take the additional step of concluding: Given that the world offers an inconsistently unsatisfactory arrangement, is it reasonable to voluntarily discontinue the species, non-breeding pair by non-breeding pair?
The key to my unwillingness to take this step is located in the phrase "inconsistently unsatisfactory". The world is also inconsistently satisfactory.
There will be unexpected pleasures in the world.
The world imposes on us the needs of survival and the possibility of realized dreams within certain environmental and cultural constraints.
"Our individual wills impose upon ourselves the need to transform boredom into goals and pleasure".
"These "truths" are independent of one's general temperament".
"One cannot choose to turn off their needs and wants- they are a part of their situation".
While granting the truth of your several points, it does not require a wholesale rejection of everything you said to place one's self CAUTIOUSLY on the side of philosophical optimism. — Bitter Crank
I would resign the chess board and recognize your victory IF one condition could be met:
IF I could show that your view of life was entirely and objectively true and my view was entirely and objectively false.
I can't, so... I do not resign the board. — Bitter Crank
That said, I have gained some respect for your argument. I don't like it, but for anyone so inclined it makes perfectly good sense. — Bitter Crank
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