In Schopenhauer's conception, the world is a unitary force (aka Will) that manifests as individuated objects in the phenomenal world of space and time. According to him, we are always striving because there is always a deprivation or lack of something — schopenhauer1
In order for there to be a world in the first place, there has to be Other, and if there is no Other than there does not seem to be any room for existence of anything. — schopenhauer1
Maybe you can explain this to me, but if the world is one (as Schopenhauer argued for, a monism), how can something be lacking? Where are these "other pieces" coming from? Are they just being rearranged endlessly as the Will changes form or whatever? — darthbarracuda
Can you explain why you think this way? — Ovaloid
In reality there is likely a naturalistic explanation for why we are the way we are, without need to appeal to an anthropomorphic "something" outside space and time or poetic hypotheses of cosmic exile, and Darwin already helped dispose of the latter (under a naturalistic framework, of course). — darthbarracuda
The naturalistic view looks at the context in which a phenomenon happens and try to understand it holistically, whereas the romantic view looks at an isolated phenomenon and attempts to explain everything else by this one phenomenon. — darthbarracuda
Schopenhauer's Will becomes not so different from the traditional conception of God, albeit without any explicit benevolence. It's a higher-power force; while theists see God as purely rational and omniscient, Schopenhauer saw the Will as purely irrational and blind; while theists see God as ultimately caring, Schopenhauer saw the Will as ultimately uncaring. They are two sides of the extreme and both involve appeals to a unitary, transcendental force behind reality. — darthbarracuda
My questioning was meant to understand how everything can be said to be a unity. If everything is everything, then this seems to be saying the same as everything is nothing as there is no room for individuation. — schopenhauer1
I brought the idea that there has to be an ever-present organism in his conception as time could not exist before the first organism perceived it, and yet time started with the first organism. — schopenhauer1
However, since the Will persists as atemporal, there could not be a time before time, and thus makes this a conundrum, as time- being the "flip-side" of Will also could not start at any prior time before time. — schopenhauer1
But if it's outside of time and space, then action cannot occur, and intelligibility doesn't seem to be able to exist, let alone be seen as a metaphysical specificity. — darthbarracuda
According to Schopenhauer, we are always striving because there is always a deprivation or lack of something. — Schopenhauer1
Experience might not even be compatible with unitary existence. — darthbarracuda
Curiously, there is a contemporary Buddhist academic, by the name of David Loy, who says that Buddhism recognises this sense of 'lack' as the source of unease or 'dukkha' which lies at the bottom of our consciousness. Loy says that much in Western culture tries to overcome or ameliorate that sense of lack through consumerism or the pursuit of power, pleasure or wealth. But all these attempts are ultimately futile, because they can't address the real source of the feeling of lack, which is that the self has no real basis in reality, so our lives are spent trying to stablise or reify something inherently unstable and fleeting. — Wayfarer
In Mahayana Buddhism, the solution to this lack is not escaping into a separate or other realm, but overcoming the 'illusion of otherness' which arises because of the constant sense of separation and the anxiety which that engenders. So it is not immersion in some undifferentiated wholeness wherein all distinctions are effaced, but in seeing through the sense of otherness that one's natural self-centerdness gives rise to. — Wayfarer
However, to experience this [i.e. the Tao] while being an individuated being seems suspect and thus a nice little existential-hero story rather than a true phenomena that has or even could happen. — Schopenhauer1
That is what Ch'an and Zen Buddhism are based on. Why not have a read of some of Alan Watts' books, his Way of Zen is a good book in my opinion, and philosophically insightful. It's been published for decades, probably out there as a PDF. — Wayfarer
I don't see how persistence makes any sense outside of any relationship to time. Maybe the Will is a transcendental space-time worm or something, where it exists at all places and at all times. But if it's outside of time and space, then action cannot occur, and intelligibility doesn't seem to be able to exist, let alone be seen as a metaphysical specificity. — "darthbarracuda
I can't recall this, but did Schopenhauer claim that some aspect of the world is not a "unitary force that manifests as individuated objects in the phenomenal world of space and time"? The way you're stating it, it sounds like he wasn't claiming that (that some aspect was not a unitary force). And it sounds like per him, one of the characteristics of the world as a unitary force is striving because of a deprivation or lack of someting. In other words, that doesn't sound like a departure from the world as a unitary force. (After all, if it were a departure, then "the world is a unitary force . . ." wouldn't be quite true after all. The world would be a unitary force AND something else.)In Schopenhauer's conception, the world is a unitary force (aka Will) that manifests as individuated objects in the phenomenal world of space and time. According to him, we are always striving because there is always a deprivation or lack of something . . . My question is, what would a world that is an absolute unitary existence being be like? — schopenhauer1
After the high of meditation, the happiness of reading a book on Zen, one must exist to exist to exist. One bears the burden of existence. — Schopenhauer1
Loy says that much in Western culture tries to overcome or ameliorate that sense of lack through consumerism or the pursuit of power, pleasure or wealth. But all these attempts are ultimately futile, because they can't address the real source of the feeling of lack, which is that the self has no real basis in reality, so our lives are spent trying to stablise or reify something inherently unstable and fleeting. — Wayfarer
None of this addresses the issue of instrumentality. After the high of meditation, the happiness of reading a book on Zen, one must exist to exist to exist. One bears the burden of existence. The idea was brought up earlier about compassion. If taken to the extreme, we do acts of compassion to do act of compassion to do act of compassion. We do science to do science to do science. We entertain ourselves to entertain ourselves to entertain ourselves. We go to sleep, we wake up and fill the void with whatever keeps our attentions on the surface. A superstructure of laws, physical environs, and social ties already in place from 100s and thousands of years of civilization- all to keep us going for no reason. — schopenhauer1
It's a hell of lot like Sartre's "man is a futile passion." — Hoo
Clearly if there is a sense of lack it can be resolved only by fulfilling that lack. Any other solution (for example getting rid of the person/self who lacks) is just like claiming that suicide solves the problem of life, or that burning the village solves its flood problems. That's merely an escape from the problem, not a solution, and there's a big difference there.Curiously, there is a contemporary Buddhist academic, by the name of David Loy, who says that Buddhism recognises this sense of 'lack' as the source of unease or 'dukkha' which lies at the bottom of our consciousness. — Wayfarer
I think the self (not the ego, very important) has a very strong basis in reality. There is nothing bad about desiring your own good - provided you understand what this really means. The moment when you understand that your good is intertwined with the good of others - that you are not an island, and your happiness depends on the happiness and fulfilment of others - that your sense of self is given by, and sustained by your community, then you will love your neighbor as yourself - because you will understand that when your neighbour suffers, you suffer. Once you understand this, then you will thirst for order - as order is the only thing which can ensure the limited fulfilment achievable on earth to you and to others. Both order in your own soul (not being overcome by greed, lust, and all the other vices - but moreover being full of the virtues - ie love, kindness, faithfulness, loyalty, chastity, etc.) and order of society (morality/tradition/religion/culture).But all these attempts are ultimately futile, because they can't address the real source of the feeling of lack, which is that the self has no real basis in reality, so our lives are spent trying to stablise or reify something inherently unstable and fleeting. — Wayfarer
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