He is an interesting philosopher, who certainly got a lot right. His writings on virtue are some of the best, and I have committed to memory some of his passages, especially from Book V of the Ethics. However, I think Spinoza paints a correct but incomplete picture; his philosophy is not critical - aware of its own limitations. The problem with his philosophy is that it doesn't provide a living answer - it's not sufficient to get someone to become virtuous - it does not teach virtue in and by itself. It cannot play that role - perhaps no work of philosophy can though, although artistic works, like Nietzsche's Zarathustra, Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling, etc. do make it more likely.What attracts me is the fact that I not only agree with him, but feel as if I always have. You dig? — Pneumenon
To truly understand Spinoza, one must retrace his steps by himself, and the moment Spinoza is used without understanding the origins of his symbols within your own experience, without appropriating him, he has been misunderstood. And so Spinoza fails at that Socratic mission of teaching virtue - of being a midwife - he HAS virtue, no doubt, but he can't teach it or share it, which ultimately reflects in Spinoza's relatively isolated life as an outcast - he didn't convince anyone, because reason alone is not sufficient to generate conviction - the will must also be moved. — Agustino
Spinoza is an ethicist - for him, the whole of philosophy is done for ethics - that is why even his magnum opus is called Ethica More Geometrico Demonstrata. Most philosophers - those that you have mentioned - are interested in Spinoza, surprise surprise, not for ethical reasons, but rather for his metaphysics. They want to take over Spinozist metaphysics because it avoids the difficulties of substance dualism, and is a coherent backbone for explaining the whole of reality, which accords physical science a fitting place. Furthermore, it is largely immanent, which means that it can allow them to dispense with God and/or the transcendent.For those of you who are drawn to Spinoza, would you be willing to share what makes him so attractive? I just can't get into him, I don't know what it is. Deleuze is one of my faves and he raves about Spinoza. Continental philosophers love him, scientists love him, historians love him, even analytic philosophers seem partial. But idk I just don't get it. — csalisbury
He admits, after his whole magnum opus, that if someone were not convinced by all his arguments, and all the metaphysics and philosophy - they would STILL have no reason, and hence no excuse, for being immoral. Spinoza's conception of freedom is NOT modern - it is pre-modern, and that's what makes it great. Even today, people associate freedom with lust, instead of with real morality. The whole of modern philosophy is a disgrace, and it is the greatest irony that these are the people who want to appropriate Spinoza, who lived a saintly life. — Agustino
I think S. states this to show, primarily, that it is UNREASONABLE not to pursue virtue - anyone who is reasonable must pursue it. I think furthermore, that since virtue is something that simply is the flowering of one's real nature and being, it cannot, by definition and once understood, be anything but a reward unto itself. Furthermore, S. combats those who aim to be virtuous for some other reason - he states "no no, don't avoid cheating on your wife because God will reward you in Heaven - avoid it because this is against your own nature here on Earth!" - in other words, don't prostitute yourself - don't be good in order to be paid - the only payment is the goodness itself.I never understood how virtue is a reward unto itself. — schopenhauer1
Knowledge of one's own virtue is dignity of character - it's not arrogance. Lack of this would be a false humility. I am well aware that modern society demands this false humility - it's a way to protect itself and its lack of virtue - no one can criticise them, or be a gadfly, as Socrates was a gadfly - because then they are labelled as arrogant.It sounds like bragging in a high-minded manner- aka smug and self-righteous. — schopenhauer1
Virtue is eudaimonia. Or in other words, virtue consists in development of character. Not self-improvement projects. Self-improvement projects may be part of virtuous living though, but they are not virtue. Virtue is the character being cultivated.Anyways, virtue to me, is just a fancy word for self-improvement projects. — schopenhauer1
Then go on a tangent and tell us what it is ;)Now, I personally think there is a more rudimentary cause of why people seek self-improvement that is more than just their stock answer of "it feels good", but that would be going on a tangent. — schopenhauer1
:s You have become quite obsessed by worthlessness - you have started to see worthlessness everywhere. It's not there, but you always read it in! Talk about projecting...His philosophy (along with many others) only fails if YOU mistakenly bring in the flawed expectation philosophy is going to be all encompassing and "save" us from worthlessness. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I disagree. If it cannot be taught, then the efforts of Socrates were for nothing. This, for a philosopher, is alike saying that Jesus's death was in vain for a Christian - blasphemy.Virtue cannot be taught, only enacted. — TheWillowOfDarkness
He just knows he is talking about something specific about, metaphysics, and tells it to its fullest extent. — TheWillowOfDarkness
It's not called Metaphysica. It's called Ethica ;)It can "teach" (inspire) virtue in people, particularly with respect to metaphysics and our relationships to them. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I think S. states this to show, primarily, that it is UNREASONABLE not to pursue virtue - anyone who is reasonable must pursue it. — Agustino
Knowledge of one's own virtue is dignity of character - it's not arrogance. — Agustino
Knowledge of one's own virtue is dignity of character - it's not arrogance. Lack of this would be a false humility. I am well aware that modern society demands this false humility - it's a way to protect itself and its lack of virtue - no one can criticise them, or be a gadfly, as Socrates was a gadfly - because then they are labelled as arrogant. — Agustino
"Greatness of mind or dignity of character; with elevation of sentiment, disdain of slavery, and with that noble pride and spirit, which arises from conscious virtue [...] To any one who duly considers of the matter, it will appear that this quality has a peculiar lustre, which it derives wholly from itself, and from that noble elevation inseparable from it" - David Hume, Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morality — Agustino
He mocked them in the court. Was Socrates arrogant? I don't think so. That quality is not called arrogance, as it is confidence based on truth. — Agustino
Virtue is eudaimonia. Or in other words, virtue consists in development of character. Not self-improvement projects. Self-improvement projects may be part of virtuous living though, but they are not virtue. Virtue is the character being cultivated. — Agustino
Then go on a tangent and tell us what it is — Agustino
Reasonable is what follows once the nature or being or essence of something is understood. The properties of circles follow once the essence of a circle is understood. They follow necessarily. Likewise morality follows necessarily once the nature of man is understood.Then what does your definition of reasonable entail? If you say that it follows the dictates of this metaphysical Reason that is behind all things, than that begs the question and just puts it in a loftier status. — schopenhauer1
I haven't stated it. You have assumed, and I responded to your assumption, since you seem to be more interested in the character that I have, and why I have it. So I am just explaining. It's not boasting when it's true, also keep that in mind.You say tomato, I say tomato. I'm just saying what it comes off as. To call boasting about one's virtue as dignity seems a bit of a stretch. Dignity would be not even mentioning it. Dignity is something which is shown but not stated. — schopenhauer1
Yes it doesn't. I haven't done that, let me remind you once again. I didnt come here shouting I am virtuous, all of you bow! You have said my remarks come off as that, so I addressed it only because you have to begin with. So don't raise the dust and then pretend you cannot see.No, rather false dignity is assuming one has knowledge of one's own (of course) virtuous character. Rather, one would just be a good person. It doesn't sound virtuous or inviting to be virtuous to shout one's accolades from the rooftops, um forums. — schopenhauer1
Virtue is not self-improvement. I've already covered that it has to do with character. Projects of self-improvement may or may not be part of character building.I can't help but think that Mr. Hume and Mr. Spinoza might be saying the same thing that I am saying that most people pursue virtue (aka "self-improvement" plans) because it makes them feel good. "Peculiar lustre", and "noble elevation" meaning a sort of pleasure of the mind from doing high-minded self-improving stuff. — schopenhauer1
No, in fact, he didn't know this as he had MULTIPLE chances to escape if he had wanted to ;)But, if he knew that he was going to die no matter what, why not rub their faces in it and let them know the great error of killing someone like himself? — schopenhauer1
Not necessarily. Some of the virtues can be gained merely through understanding, not any sort of what is associated with self-improvement projects, which do not consist of mere understanding, but of actually doing something.Virtue is the goal and the path to virtue is self-improvement plans — schopenhauer1
No, there is something admirable about people like Epictetus, Socrates, Alexander the Great, etc. they are not just any other human being. They are great. It is not, contrary to what you say here:In the Western world this takes the form of self-help books. If one wants to feel a bit more fancy about it with more systematization (of varying degrees), one reaches for a Spinoza or Aristotle or Epictetus. — schopenhauer1
It's not just a personality. It is something more, something authentically superior about those people. That is virtue.Or you can think all of it is bullshit we do to keep our minds occupied, and this seems the most user-friendly version for those who have personalities that gravitate to this sort of thing. There are some personalities that take to following what they view to be foundational ethical practices- usually the ones commonly taught in societies. — schopenhauer1
Survival yes - boredom no. Boredom occurs when we are not motivated - it's exactly the opposite of motivation. Boredom cannot motivate - by definition, since it is the absence of all motivation. The person who is motivated is not bored, and the person who is bored is not motivated. For this reason, boredom cannot act as a motivating factor. If it did, it could not be the opposite of the motivated state.I just kind of did in my previous paragraph there, but to reiterate, we are motivated out of supreme existential boredom and survival. — schopenhauer1
Reasonable is what follows once the nature or being or essence of something is understood. The properties of circles follow once the essence of a circle is understood. They follow necessarily. Likewise morality follows necessarily once the nature of man is understood. — Agustino
I haven't stated it. You have assumed, and I responded to your assumption, since you seem to be more interested in the character that I have, and why I have it. So I am just explaining. It's not boasting when it's true, also keep that in mind. — Agustino
Yes it doesn't. I haven't done that, let me remind you once again. I didnt come here shouting I am virtuous, all of you bow! You have said my remarks come off as that, so I addressed it only because you have to begin with. So don't raise the dust and then pretend you cannot see. — Agustino
— Agustino
No, in fact, he didn't know this as he had MULTIPLE chances to escape if he had wanted to
It's not just a personality. It is something more, something authentically superior about those people. That is virtue. — Agustino
Survival yes - boredom no. Boredom occurs when we are not motivated - it's exactly the opposite of motivation. Boredom cannot motivate - by definition, since it is the absence of all motivation. The person who is motivated is not bored, and the person who is bored is not motivated. For this reason, boredom cannot act as a motivating factor. If it did, it could not be the opposite of the motivated state. — Agustino
Prove it. What shall you use? Reason? Or will you use un-reason? If you use reason, then we're playing the same game. So prove it to me. Prove it to me that this "nature of man" can be anything.Your conceit is now that there is a "nature of man" to be understood. That is a lump of clay anyone can interpret is anything.. Rhetoric can justify its reason for your interpretation for it, but the premises are going to be mighty shaky. — schopenhauer1
Yes, well said, YOU see it as boasting, you are interpreting it that way, and I see that it is annoying you. You have a problem with me being virtuous. Why? Let's interrogate this. What about it makes you feel bad? When I see someone like Socrates for example - I feel all but admiration for them, and I wish to emulate them, because their virtue is greater than mine. I don't react like "OMG what an ass this person is boasting of his strength of character, etc.". I look at him, and say "I wanna be like that too!"Just by asserting virtue in the picture is a sort of boasting. I see virtue theory as boasting. You mine as well be a metaphorical Conan the Barbarian flaunting his strength and pounding his chest in the "strength of his character" (whatever that means..). We are living in a communal world. No one is an island. Your virtue is a signal to others.. a boastful symbol of your awesome strength. You can fool yourself all you want otherwise. — schopenhauer1
Yes, does this annoy you? Why?You talked about the morality of most people, and how they are not virtuous (assuming like you, or at least your philosophical heroes in the pantheon of Reason who are the truly good people). No, not indirectly boastful or self-righteous — schopenhauer1
I've done this already. I can be quite content sitting for long times doing nothing too. I never get bored. But, suppose I were to lock myself in such a room for a very long period of time - I figure I would begin to lose my sanity, not that I will be bored and look to do something. I will simply lose my humanity, by not relating with other people.Really? Sit in a room and do nothing for hours on end, with little stimulation except your own thoughts. Some monks can do it, but they are actually doing something- usually mental exercises. Anyways, you will get bored and be "motivated" to do something to not be bored. Seems to me boredom motivates more than anything else. Many people would rather do mindless chores and upkeep on their possessions than be bored. — schopenhauer1
Prove it. What shall you use? Reason? Or will you use un-reason? If you use reason, then we're playing the same game. So prove it to me. Prove it to me that this "nature of man" can be anything. — Agustino
Yes, well said, YOU see it as boasting, you are interpreting it that way, and I see that it is annoying you. You have a problem with me being virtuous. Why? Let's interrogate this. What about it makes you feel bad? When I see someone like Socrates for example - I feel all but admiration for them, and I wish to emulate them, because their virtue is greater than mine. I don't react like "OMG what an ass this person is boasting of his strength of character, etc.". I look at him, and say "I wanna be like that too!" — Agustino
es, does this annoy you? Why? — Agustino
I've done this already. I can be quite content sitting for long times doing nothing too. I never get bored. But, suppose I were to lock myself in such a room for a very long period of time - I figure I would begin to lose my sanity, not that I will be bored and look to do something. I will simply lose my humanity, by not relating with other people. — Agustino
No - many of these are in large agreement with each other by the way. And even if they can put forward many theories, it doesn't mean they are all correct, neither does it mean that we cannot discover which approximates the truth better, neither does it mean that we shouldn't try. This is a weak and lazy attempt schopenhauer1 ... one expects better from a philosopher, these sound more like the words of philistines, with no personal analysis of the matter at all.We are restless Will that strives for things. By necessity, time passes and strive for things.. yadayada.. oh hell with it.. Here is a good start so I don't have to give a whole damn treatise: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/38427/38427-pdf.pdf
But wait.. that's not all so is this: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39064/39064-h/39064-h.html
But wait...there's this: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4705/4705-h/4705-h.htm
And on and on.. Yep, people can reason many ways to explain human nature. There are many variations of this theme. — schopenhauer1
Fine, I see that you have a problem with many of the wise people from the past as well.I always imagined people who had "good character" (even though that really doesn't exist in my mind) never really talked about it much because they were living it. That is why I am suspect.. The whole Virtue crew (Epictetus bunch and others), seemed a bit too conspicuous with their talk and show.. Always seemed a bit overstated. — schopenhauer1
Why are you irritated that I think I am superior? Do you really fear that I am superior? A person who knows the truth, would not have such fears now, would they? But it seems you are uncertain - maybe maybe - I am superior, and that is worrying you. Again - it's a problem you have manufactured and have read into me. I never claimed to be superior. I never even thought about it. You are thinking about it in that manner.don't feel bad as much as irritated that you think that you are superior.. — schopenhauer1
Virtue does make people more noble - this does not mean that it makes them superior. Before God (morally) we are all equal.It more irritates me in the fact that you think this reification makes some people better or more superior than others. — schopenhauer1
Well okay, I am the first human to do so. Do I get a prize? Seriously, what's the point of having a discussion if we can't even trust what we say we have experienced? If we're going to doubt each other's experiences, and claim "no you haven't" when someone claims something, without even offering a different interpretation of the experience in question, there's really no point in having a discussion is there? I'm willing to listen to you and take what you say into consideration, but I feel you are not willing to do the same when it comes to me - because you have separated yourself from me, by putting me in the superior category in your mind, and obviously keeping yourself in the inferior category. When I read Epictetus, I don't mind being inferior to him - because I know that I too, given sufficient effort and time, will become like him. I am happy to see, in fact, that a human being could become like that. It means that I too can become so! So my mind never rushes to categorise inferior/superior. That simply doesn't matter to me. Epictetus, and many others, are images which motivate me.If you don't get bored ever, and you have never done something because you would be bored otherwise, then you are the first human to do so. — schopenhauer1
This is a weak and lazy attempt schopenhauer1 ... one expects better from a philosopher, these sound more like the words of philistines, with no personal analysis of the matter at all. — Agustino
Why are you irritated that I think I am superior? Do you really fear that I am superior? A person who knows the truth, would not have such fears now, would they? But it seems you are uncertain - maybe maybe - I am superior, and that is worrying you. Again - it's a problem you have manufactured and have read into me. I never claimed to be superior. I never even thought about it. You are thinking about it in that manner. — Agustino
Virtue does make people more noble - this does not mean that it makes them superior. Before God (morally) we are all equal. — Agustino
I'm willing to listen to you and take what you say into consideration, but I feel you are not willing to do the same when it comes to me - because you have separated yourself from me, by putting me in the superior category in your mind, and obviously keeping yourself in the inferior category. When I read Epictetus, I don't mind being inferior to him - because I know that I too, given sufficient effort and time, will become like him. I am happy to see, in fact, that a human being could become like that. It means that I too can become so! — Agustino
I'm willing to listen to you and take what you say into consideration, but I feel you are not willing to do the same when it comes to me - because you have separated yourself from me, by putting me in the superior category in your mind, and obviously keeping yourself in the inferior category. When I read Epictetus, I don't mind being inferior to him - because I know that I too, given sufficient effort and time, will become like him. I am happy to see, in fact, that a human being could become like that. It means that I too can become so! — Agustino
LOL! Yes - you certainly chose the perfect example :p ... (by the way, you should've chosen Hegel, I know far far less Hegel than Schopenhauer, who I've studied extensively especially for the last two years!) Since Schopenhauer is one of the philosophers I admire most, I cannot let his genius be used as support for the highest abominations of thought. All quotes from WWR Vol II'm honestly not up to give a complete picture of my worldview right now correct, but providing Schop's view is a good stand in for now. — schopenhauer1
Okay so don't run away from the question I have asked. You still haven't answered it. What irritates you about me thinking that I am superior?You don't have to state it.. you exude it in your posts.. Mind you that you "think" you are superior, not that you are. — schopenhauer1
Schopenhauer disagreed ;)But just like virtue, it stands on nothing of substance. It's a non-concept made real by custom. — schopenhauer1
Maybe from what you've experienced. Certainly not from what others have experienced. Buddha, Jesus, Socrates, etc.Because what you say is so far removed from what I have experienced, and what other people have shared as what is part of their human experience, it is suspect. — schopenhauer1
Again, Schopenhauer did not agree with this nonsense :)Virtue, however is kind of bullshit. — schopenhauer1
Virtue has often times, even as Schopenhauer argues, been associated with that which leads towards the denial of the will-to-live and hence to something that is NOT necessarily socially useful.What I think virtue actually is (besides a way to boast), is a certain society's recipe as to how to live successfully in that society. — schopenhauer1
I disagree. If it cannot be taught, then the efforts of Socrates were for nothing. This, for a philosopher, is alike saying that Jesus's death was in vain for a Christian - blasphemy. — Agustino
You have become quite obsessed by worthlessness - you have started to see worthlessness everywhere. It's not there, but you always read it in! Talk about projecting... — Agustino
highest abominations of thought — Agustino
I take up again the thread of our discussion of the ethical significance of conduct, to show how, from the same source from which all goodness, affection, VIRTUE, and NOBILITY OF CHARACTER spring, there ultimately also arises what I call denial of the will-to-live" — Agustino
It's certainly no good to get one's views of Schopenhauer from wikipedia. — Agustino
Okay so don't run away from the question I have asked. You still haven't answered it. What irritates you about me thinking that I am superior? — Agustino
Schopenhauer disagreed ;) — Agustino
Maybe from what you've experienced. Certainly not from what others have experienced. Buddha, Jesus, Socrates, etc. — Agustino
Yes you did want to, that's why you gave me Schopenhauer's system no? You directed me towards it, I didn't just randomly choose it, did I?Really? Abominations? Not wanting to explain my whole philosophy in a particular post is an abomination now? — schopenhauer1
Then please don't tell me that your thought is explained or supported by Schopenhauer, because I have read Schopenhauer, and I know it isn't.Then I disagree with Schopenhauer. — schopenhauer1
The belief in virtue and nobility IS a core part of Schopenhauer's philosophy. According to S. virtue comes prior to the denial of the will and is motivated by the same sentiments that motivated the denial of the will when fully expanded on. Some people reach up to virtue and never go beyond to the denial of the will. In fact, S. spends quite a few chapters discussing virtue in the last book of his WWR Volume I.I don't subscribe slavishily to Schopenhauer, but respect much of his core views. — schopenhauer1
No, not settled due to strong conviction, settled by argument instead.It was also used to prove that human nature is argued about, and there is no way the matter is settled due to strong conviction that one is more reasonable and has thus found the answer. — schopenhauer1
Good, thanks for at least admitting that you are irrational, and you will freely discard parts of systems, regardless of the demands of reasons to agree to what follows from some of the statements...Yes, they are system-builders and much of what they say follows from previous statements, but I don't care- I like some things, and don't like others in their systems. — schopenhauer1
It's not a snide remark - it's there to show that if you want to argue against virtue ethics, then you need a lot more than snide and arrogant pretences and (false) appeals to other philosophers. You need to actually expound a coherent system, and actually provide justification and arguments, not mere assertions. And by the way, most disagreement in philosophical history has generally been over metaphysics and epistemology, NOT over ethics. Most philosophers have expounded radically similar ethical theories.This is a trolling statement. Is this the fruits of being virtuous? Snide remarks on what you deem as your internet interlocutors? — schopenhauer1
No it doesn't. For one, narcism is defined as excessive love of self. More than one's self deserves in other words. If one is superior, it follows that his self deserves more love - does it not? So if you think one is superior, then you can't accuse them of narcissism. On the other hand, how is saying "I am virtuous" for example, love of self? Love of self is, when we don't have enough food to fully fill both of us, me taking that food and eating it all myself. That is narcissism. When one says "I am virtuous and therefore I deserve more bread than you do", that is narcissism. But when one states "I am virtuous" - there is no narcissism in that, just a statement. Not to mention that I didn't even say that I am fully virtuous, and I have said, in one of the other threads, that I have been wrong many times.I don't know- because it borders on narcissism and narcissism turns me off? — schopenhauer1
Hopefully you don't mean false humility. Because Schopenhauer, whose name you bear, had this to say about false humility and modesty:It's arrogant, and whatever virtue is- it seems to me humility is a large part of it. — schopenhauer1
Wrong. For example - Buddhism, just as Christianity, condemns sexual immorality and even has a specific rule against it for lay people:Very different people whose texts that are attributed to them conveyed different types of ethics — schopenhauer1
And who are you to question the evidence that exists? On what basis are you questioning it? On the basis of your feelings?Who are you to know what the real person felt? — schopenhauer1
Yes, but then you are being irrational. You have no reason to disbelieve them, except your self-supported fantasies.Even if they literally said they don't get bored, and this was verified as a true statement, I would not believe them. — schopenhauer1
No of course it doesn't refute your SENTIMENTS. How could it? Words don't refute feelings. That you feel this way is a given fact. You don't feel like trusting these sources. But again, that is a feeling, and not a reason. So I acknowledge your feeling, but have to say once again that this has no bearing on the rational discourse we are, both I am assuming, trying to carry here.This does not refute my sentiments and does not bolster the idea that virtue exists. — schopenhauer1
Yes you did want to, that's why you gave me Schopenhauer's system no? You directed me towards it, I didn't just randomly choose it, did I? — Agustino
Then please don't tell me that your thought is explained or supported by Schopenhauer, because I have read Schopenhauer, and I know it isn't. — Agustino
Making a consistent argument is not making a sound argument. Stumping an opponent isn't even a sound argument, just a good rhetorician- ask Socrates.No, not settled due to strong conviction, settled by argument instead. — Agustino
Good, thanks for at least admitting that you are irrational, and you will freely discard parts of systems, regardless of the demands of reasons to agree to what follows from some of the statements... — Agustino
No, you have narcissism wrong then. It does not have to take the crude form of simply being selfish. One can give quite largely and be narcissistic. All it takes is being conspicuously boastful about it and make people know that your efforts or this and that virtuous act. Meanwhile, the humble person just does a good act, and doesn't need the recognition, praise, or even label as being "virtuous". Perhaps someone else might view this, but they would never look at it this way themselves.No it doesn't. For one, narcism is defined as excessive love of self. More than one's self deserves in other words. If one is superior, it follows that his self deserves more love - does it not? So if you think one is superior, then you can't accuse them of narcissism. On the other hand, how is saying "I am virtuous" for example, love of self? Love of self is, when we don't have enough food to fully fill both of us, me taking that food and eating it all myself. That is narcissism. When one says "I am virtuous and therefore I deserve more bread than you do", that is narcissism. But when one states "I am virtuous" - there is no narcissism in that, just a statement. Not to mention that I didn't even say that I am fully virtuous, and I have said, in one of the other threads, that I have been wrong many times. — Agustino
Wrong. For example - Buddhism, just as Christianity, condemns sexual immorality and even has a specific rule against it for lay people: — Agustino
Also, I expected someone who has read WWR Volume I to be aware of the many similarities between Buddhism and Christianity for example, which despite the distances between the regions where the two religions formed and flourished, nevertheless exist, and Schopenhauer takes great pains to point them out continuously through the book. — Agustino
On the basis of my experience and what others experience. If you want, go read more Schopenhauer on it, he discusses this at length- his pendulum swing.And who are you to question the evidence that exists? On what basis are you questioning it? On the basis of your feelings? — Agustino
No of course it doesn't refute your SENTIMENTS. How could it? Words don't refute feelings. That you feel this way is a given fact. You don't feel like trusting these sources. But again, that is a feeling, and not a reason. So I acknowledge your feeling, but have to say once again that this has no bearing on the rational discourse we are, both I am assuming, trying to carry here. — Agustino
No, S. did not think boredom was a motivating force. He thought the existence of boredom is proof that existence in this world is worthless. He identified boredom with the direct awareness of the world's worthlessness.My thought on character is not "supported by Schopenhauer" but my views on boredom, survival, and life's general tendency to never be fully satisfied align with Schopenhauer. — schopenhauer1
Yeah, did I say otherwise in the bit which you quoted?Making a consistent argument is not making a sound argument. Stumping an opponent isn't even a sound argument, just a good rhetorician- ask Socrates. — schopenhauer1
While granting the premises? That's impossible. You must disagree with at least one premise.It's not irrational to have discernment and not follow every conclusion? — schopenhauer1
About which virtuous act have I made people aware? :DAll it takes is being conspicuously boastful about it and make people know that your efforts or this and that virtuous act. — schopenhauer1
Yes, exactly, so the humble person is the one trying to convince the others of the goodness of virtue :)Meanwhile, the humble person just does a good act, and doesn't need the recognition, praise, or even label as being "virtuous". — schopenhauer1
They are almost the same. The difference is that Schopenhauer claims that virtue is not the end - unlike Aristotle for example. Instead, the end is what is beyond virtue - denial of the will-to-live.I don't view Socrates/Plato/Aristotle's virtues proper as the same as the Schopenhauer's conception of "virtue" — schopenhauer1
He was against it ONLY from the vantage point of the denial of the will to live. Not from the vantage point of the average person, a vantage point from which virtue is very important.. Virtue proper is very much "of this world"- the type of thing Schopenhauer was against — schopenhauer1
Exactly, a step beyond mere virtue.This world is the world of Maya and suffering, thus one is compelled to be free of its fetters through world-renounciation, not mere character building. — schopenhauer1
Nope. For Schopenhauer, prudence was still a virtue, so was courage, so was temperance, so was justice, so were ALL the other virtues of Aristotle/Plato.Despite Schop's use of virtue- it is rather different than Stoic/Aristotlean/Platonic visions of virtue. — schopenhauer1
-_- yes, what "others" experience after you eliminate those whose experiences are not valid right?On the basis of my experience and what others experience. — schopenhauer1
No - boredom does not motivate. What motivates is the will-to-live, according to Schopenhauer.and if they are not surviving or anxious about this or that little uncomfortable feeling- then they are motivated by boredom. — schopenhauer1
No, S. did not think boredom was a motivating force. He thought the existence of boredom is proof that existence in this world is worthless. — Agustino
Certain it is that work, worry, labor and trouble, form the lot of almost all men their whole life long. But if all wishes were fulfilled as soon as they arose, how would men occupy their lives? what would they do with their time? If the world were a paradise of luxury and ease, a land flowing with milk and honey, where every Jack obtained his Jill at once and without any difficulty, men would either die of boredom or hang themselves; or there would be wars, massacres, and murders; so that in the end mankind would inflict more suffering on itself than it has now to accept at the hands of Nature. — Schopenhauer
Boredom is a form of suffering unknown to brutes, at any rate in their natural state; it is only the very cleverest of them who show faint traces of it when they are domesticated; whereas in the case of man it has become a downright scourge. The crowd of miserable wretches whose one aim in life is to fill their purses but never to put anything into their heads, offers a singular instance of this torment of boredom. Their wealth becomes a punishment by delivering them up to misery of having nothing to do; for, to escape it, they will rush about in all directions, traveling here, there and everywhere. No sooner do they arrive in a place than they are anxious to know what amusements it affords; just as though they were beggars asking where they could receive a dole! Of a truth, need and boredom are the two poles of human life. Finally, I may mention that as regards the sexual relation, a man is committed to a peculiar arrangement which drives him obstinately to choose one person. This feeling grows, now and then, into a more or less passionate love,2 which is the source of little pleasure and much suffering. — Schopenhauer
At the same time it is a wonderful thing that, in the world of human beings as in that of animals in general, this manifold restless motion is produced and kept up by the agency of two simple impulses — hunger and the sexual instinct; aided a little, perhaps, by the influence of boredom, but by nothing else; and that, in the theatre of life, these suffice to form the primum mobile of how complicated a machinery, setting in motion how strange and varied a scene! — Schopenhauer
Life presents itself chiefly as a task — the task, I mean, of subsisting at all, gagner sa vie. If this is accomplished, life is a burden, and then there comes the second task of doing something with that which has been won — of warding off boredom, which, like a bird of prey, hovers over us, ready to fall wherever it sees a life secure from need. The first task is to win something; the second, to banish the feeling that it has been won; otherwise it is a burden.
While granting the premises? That's impossible. You must disagree with at least one premise. — Agustino
Yes, exactly, so the humble person is the one trying to convince the others of the goodness of virtue :) — Agustino
They are almost the same. The difference is that Schopenhauer claims that virtue is not the end - unlike Aristotle for example. Instead, the end is what is beyond virtue - denial of the will-to-live. — Agustino
What motivates is the will-to-live, according to Schopenhauer. — Agustino
Yes - but these are made in the context of his larger philosophy. Also:While certainly I agree he said this sentiment, and I agree with him very much so on this point, there a many quotes just from his shorter works on the motivations of boredom including but not limited to these: — schopenhauer1
The quotes you have given do not illustrate that S. considered boredom to be a motivating factor. On the contrary, boredom is what is always eliminated because of the will-to-live. Because of the pull of the will-to-live one does not support boredom.How do you think the will-to-live is carried out? Survival (goals/tasks/discomfort that is imposed by the constraints of the world) and its opposite end which is boredom (which brings us to more goals/tasks that are self-imposed). — schopenhauer1
Ok.No, I meant by that, not agreeing with every premise, hence not agreeing with the conclusion. In other words, while internally consistent or valid of its own logical structure, it is not sound. — schopenhauer1
It may be necessary to convince people of his accolades but only if this helps spread the message.No, rather, the humble person is not trying to convince people of his/her accolades at all. The humble person would not think about it like that, but simply do what is right without thoughts of the glory this would bring to their name. Those who place the person on a pedestal and calling others inferior instead of simply following in that person's example, would be making a folly that does not seem to jive with what is usually seen as virtuous. — schopenhauer1
Courage, for example, also extinguishes the individual ego, in-so-far as one is ready to sacrifice his own self for something. Nevertheless, this is not a full extinguishing of the will-to-live, which in some form is still affirmed. From this higher vantage point ONLY does Schopenhauer not think of courage alone and by itself as a virtue.Not really- the one "virtue" Schopenhauer values as ethical is that which extinguishes the individual ego. — schopenhauer1
No it isn't. Schopenhauer never denied the truth of the Stoics/Aristotle. He just went beyond it. That is NOT denying their truth. It is rather subsuming it under a higher Truth - and from the vantage point of the higher Truth it becomes "false". But from the vantage point of the average individual, virtue ethics still retains its truthfulness.If you want to call this virtue as the Stoics/Aristotle and the link practiced them, be my guest, but that is to conflate two very different systems. — schopenhauer1
I think rather virtue is necessary in order to step onto what S. identified as asceticism and denial of the will to live.Virtue theories, at the end of the day, through the goal of being "this or that" kind of character, are creating a certain society, or ideal for people to follow in society, and thus more social engineering than anything else. — schopenhauer1
The quotes you have given do not illustrate that S. considered boredom to be a motivating factor. On the contrary, boredom is what is always eliminated because of the will-to-live. Because of the pull of the will-to-live one does not support boredom. — Agustino
It may be necessary to convince people of his accolades but only if this helps spread the message. — Agustino
Courage, for example, also extinguishes the individual ego, in-so-far as one is ready to sacrifice his own self for something. Nevertheless, this is not a full extinguishing of the will-to-live, which in some form is still affirmed. From this higher vantage point ONLY does Schopenhauer not think of courage alone and by itself as a virtue. — Agustino
No it isn't. Schopenhauer never denied the truth of the Stoics/Aristotle. He just went beyond it. That is NOT denying their truth. It is rather subsuming it under a higher Truth - and from the vantage point of the higher Truth it becomes "false". But from the vantage point of the average individual, virtue ethics still retains its truthfulness. — Agustino
I think rather virtue is necessary in order to step onto what S. identified as asceticism and denial of the will to live. — Agustino
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