This is obviously a decoupling of truth (and metaphysics) from reality as we see and feel it, and problematizes how far we can know given that we are fooled by the Will. — Agustino
No, the claim was more radical than that - we cannot know the truth of the world as such - the truth of the world for us is will.if the we claimed that the truth of the world is its instrumentality (its need to strive forward for no reason without much end in sight), and people are wont to viscerally deny this through whatever means necessary to keep their own organism (and their offspring) moving forward, then indeed fitness for survival will always outcompete truth. — schopenhauer1
It does have an aim. That's why it is willing. Willing is the aim.The world is really will- a striving force that has no aim or purpose. — schopenhauer1
I would disagree with Schopenhauer at this point. In the process of denial of the will I think compassion, rather than renunciation and asceticism, is the driving engine and most important factor. It is love if anything that opens the gate beyond willing.The goal then of the enlightened individual is to turn the will against itself, live an ascetic life where will becomes gradually diminished, until it loses its grip completely thus somehow diminishing the reign of will's supremacy in some fashion. — schopenhauer1
I agree about the concomitance of representation and will - except that I disagree with the identification between Will and thing-in-itself, and old Schopenhauer would very likely have disagreed too.1) If it is will that is thing-in-itself, and there is no causitive nature to the thing-in-itself (logically or temporally), then there cannot be a before or after. There cannot be a will and then something else. Thus, representation being secondary to will, cannot come after but be concomitant all the way down. Thus the thing-in-itself must logically be will AND representation and not just will. — schopenhauer1
I don't think so, since the Will is atemporal, temporality only exists in the objectification of the Will qua representation. Will projects time.2) If representation started with the first organism to represent its world (he used an analogy of the eye of a fish), then this makes the tricky situation of time itself starting with the first representational animal. This gets into problem that this organism then becomes extremely important in his ontology, as if the representation is always the flip side of will, then the organism would have to be a being in time, yet timeless, as if we look at my first argument, there was no before and after prior to representation, thus representation would have to be there from the beginning, or the animal that represents would have to be there from the beginning, which is an odd conclusion. — schopenhauer1
The representation is the objectification of the Will - the Will projects an external world, in time, etc. for itself. By projecting its own striving, it projects the world, including the structures of representation. For example, by projecting the failure of its striving to attain, it projects an external world in which it is a suffering victim and unable to control what happens to itself.What is the nature of this representation? — schopenhauer1
he illusion isn't representation and Will is truth - rather they are both illusions. The Will is just the truth of the representation, but it is not truth in-itself, except perhaps in some partial and incomplete sense. — Agustino
No, the claim was more radical than that - we cannot know the truth of the world as such - the truth of the world for us is will. — Agustino
It does have an aim. That's why it is willing. Willing is the aim. — Agustino
I would disagree with Schopenhauer at this point. In the process of denial of the will I think compassion, rather than renunciation and asceticism, is the driving engine and most important factor. It is love if anything that opens the gate beyond willing. — Agustino
I agree about the concomitance of representation and will - except that I disagree with the identification between Will and thing-in-itself, and old Schopenhauer would very likely have disagreed too. — Agustino
I don't think so, since the Will is atemporal, temporality only exists in the objectification of the Will qua representation. Will projects time. — Agustino
The representation is the objectification of the Will - the Will projects an external world, in time, etc. for itself. By projecting its own striving, it projects the world, including the structures of representation. For example, by projecting the failure of its striving to attain, it projects an external world in which it is a suffering victim and unable to control what happens to itself. — Agustino
I think your reading misses precisely the point I'm trying to put my finger on. Schopenhauer never does metaphysics. The illusion isn't representation and Will is truth - rather they are both illusions. The Will is just the truth of the representation, but it is not truth in-itself, except perhaps in some partial and incomplete sense. — Agustino
Yes, I am obviously attempting inquiry.Are you attempting inquiry?
Is all this an illusion? — Rich
That depends on what you mean by illusion. When we say the representation is an illusion, we don't mean that the representation doesn't exist, only that it's not what it appears to be. The world of representation is thus dream-like. So representation is an illusion simply means that, for example, there is something that appears to be an external world, like in a dream, while it's actually all subjectively generated. In this manner, you too - being a Daoist - believe the world is an illusion. What did Zhuangzi say - one time I dreamed I was a butterfly, and then I woke up. I am not sure if it is now that I am a butterfly dreaming that I am a man, or that I was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly. This is precisely what it means that representation is illusory.Is all this an illusion? — Rich
Well, this is either tautologically true (sort of like A = A), or it is a misunderstanding of illusions. What is an illusion? In a sense, an illusion is nothing - it's not an additional substance out there - it's just the wrong conception that something is the case when it isn't. It's a deception of the mind.Everything is exactly as we observe it, but it is not all and it is constantly changing — Rich
Nobody argued everything is illusory. As I said, Schopenhauer wasn't doing metaphysics there.It's not an illusion but we are only grasping it bits at a time. That is the fun of life. It is detective work, it is mysterious, but it is not an illusion. How could it be? What or who is creating the illusions? Chemicals?? — Rich
More - a species that survives does not know (leaning towards cannot know) what is true.I'd still say the main gist of what he was saying is truth can be in conflict with fitness and a species that survives does what is fit not what is truthful. — schopenhauer1
Yes, Will is like the serpent that eats its own tail - Will consumes itself, and thus goes on Willing.I think you're putting the cart before the horse. The process of aiming (with no avail) is the will process. We do not aim at willing, it is the underlying process that causes one to aim in the first place. I am guessing you are trying to do some unique reading of this, and thus the claim where I am supposedly misguided, but I don't see it when reading Schopenhauer, and logically it seems to be a little word play you're doing that doesn't make sense. Will does what it does. It is the ground of being in his philosophy. Will plays itself out in the world of appearance (i.e. time/space/causality) in its restless nature, but no goal ever achieves satisfaction. — schopenhauer1
He started to shy away from this identification towards the end of his life, when he reverted more to the Kantian understanding of thing-in-itself as an unknown X.I'm not sure what you mean here. Schopenhauer identified Will with thing-in-itself constantly. — schopenhauer1
We don't know what is beyond the Will.If all is monistic, then Will is all there is. — schopenhauer1
I would say that the Will is the ground of the phenomenon, and thus there is a logical priority in the Will. The phenomenon is static. Time wouldn't flow for example if there was no Will. The flow of time is the Will. That's what grounds time, its flow, and the whole structure of the representation.Rather, instead of being the "true" ground, it has to be concommitant. — schopenhauer1
Yep, Schopenhauer says exactly this. Time is atemporal since the Will is always there, that's why from within representation time has an infinite past as it were - the Will projects itself in time, and thus time appears as infinite.In other words, even though time is only in appearance, somehow it has to be atemporal as well because it has always been there as flipside of Will. — schopenhauer1
I think this is the most profound misunderstanding. Quite the contrary, the Will is seen DIRECTLY unlike the representation which is perceived through the principle of sufficient reason. When you will something, you feel it instantaneously, there is no separation, like there is temporal, spatial, etc. separation in the representation. So if anything, it is the representation that is not seen directly, but mediated through the categories.I'm not sure what you are getting at here. In so far as Will itself is only seen to us through the representation, it is never seen in and of itself, only gleaned at through introspection and logical analysis. — schopenhauer1
When we say the representation is an illusion, we don't mean that the representation doesn't exist, only that it's not what it appears to be. — Agustino
An illusion is a misunderstanding. — Agustino
What is an illusion? Can you offer me an example as well please? — Agustino
I think this is the most profound misunderstanding. Quite the contrary, the Will is seen DIRECTLY unlike the representation which is perceived through the principle of sufficient reason. When you will something, you feel it instantaneously, there is no separation, like there is temporal, spatial, etc. separation in the representation. So if anything, it is the representation that is not seen directly, but mediated through the categories. — Agustino
The Will is just the truth of the representation, but it is not truth in-itself, except perhaps in some partial and incomplete sense. — Agustino
He started to shy away from this identification towards the end of his life, when he reverted more to the Kantian understanding of thing-in-itself as an unknown X. — Agustino
Yes, but don't forget that the Will appears as "nothing" to those where no Will is present, and inversely, everything else (non-Will) appears as "nothing" to those full of will. So no - Will is not thing-in-itself - at least not the complete thing-in-itself.Thus, Will as thing-in-itself is not fully realized. — schopenhauer1
I don't see how it's mediated by appearances at all. The feeling of pain just is pain, there's nothing "mediating" it. There's no separation between experiencing it and itself.Now, yes Schopenhauer did say that we can feel the immediacy of Will in our very willing movements, but it is still will as mediated by appearance — schopenhauer1
Schopenhauer denied this "one" for neither one nor two.and fully monistic. — schopenhauer1
I would disagree with Schopenhauer that there is one Will. Rather the World is the summation of Wills, which are similar to Leibniz's monads - I think that is a better way to think of it, one that I have only started investigating recently. Or perhaps even better said - the Will is a fragmentary process.We can glean it is a striving principle and that we are part of the striving itself in our own natures. — schopenhauer1
Once you define what this mysterious, magical, or illusory are (since now you're just giving me synonyms right now), I will be able to tell you what I think. If you cannot point me to the meaning of these words, then clearly I can't tell you in a way where we both agree on the meanings.Do you think something mysterious and magical is going on. Or v is it just incomplete and continuously changing? — Rich
I would disagree with Schopenhauer that there is one Will. Rather the World is the summation of Wills, which are similar to Leibniz's monads - I think that is a better way to think of it, one that I have only started investigating recently. Or perhaps even better said - the Will is a fragmentary process. — Agustino
I don't see how it's mediated by appearances at all. The feeling of pain just is pain, there's nothing "mediating" it. There's no separation between experiencing it and itself. — Agustino
I have not studied Whitehead.If that's the case, skip Leibniz and go right to Whitehead's process philosophy. — schopenhauer1
>:O - and would it move out of my way then?Man, you would debate a wall if it got in your way. — schopenhauer1
“Truly I tell you that if anyone says to this mountain, ‘Be lifted up and thrown into the sea,’ and has no doubt in his heart but believes that it will happen, it will be done for him. — Mark 11:23
It's a me vs you dialectic not because you said it, but rather because I really disagree with your ideas on those points. I haven't bothered to comment on things I agree with, obviously.Can you ever incorporate the other's ideas rather than pure me vs. you dialectic? — schopenhauer1
I don't take debate personally. I'm not pained if you disagree with me, I'm not here to convince you.Doesn't this way of debating wear you out and frustrate? — schopenhauer1
But isn't willing a pain, a suffering? When you're hungry, that is willing. The feeling of hunger is an aspect of Will.Anyways, pain is pain, but if all were pure will,(or rather X), then there is no pain, no you, no nothing except Will. — schopenhauer1
Well right, if you define illusion as that which doesn't exist, no wonder then that you struggle to say what an illusion actually is or feel perplexed when representation is called maya or an illusion.There are no illusions and illusions are not misunderstandings. However, I understand the appeal for those who wish to create an aura if mystery. The Hindus call it the Maya. — Rich
But isn't willing a pain, a suffering? When you're hungry, that is willing. The feeling of hunger is an aspect of Will. — Agustino
I know that Schopenhauer would say that, but I'm not quite sure. In hunger, the subject and object are the same it seems to me. That's why I said:It is a manifestation of willing in the subject/object relationship.. one step down from Will, that mysterious force in-itself. — schopenhauer1
Here, subject and object are identical it seems to me. Am I wrong?The feeling of pain just is pain — Agustino
Well right, if you define illusion as that which doesn't exist, no wonder then that you struggle to say what an illusion actually is or feel perplexed when representation is called maya or an illusion. — Agustino
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