Whoa. You can't be serious. This reduces the importance of agency in our lives and assumes some fatalistic psychological stance, much like the one Freud and other psychologists covered, which leads to an overwhelming sense of futility and pessimism in one's life. — Posty McPostface
Nietzsche professed a philosophy that entices and encourages the rise of delusions, with his appeal to psychological needs as the only motivating force in a man's life. — Posty McPostface
Therefore it would seem that the problem of psychology is (upon a fundamental level) ultimately a problem of instinctual imperative. Freud approached this issue but encountered a problem in respect of suicidal or self destructive drives.
Freud“In biological functions the two basic instincts operate against each other or combine with each other. Thus, the act of eating is a destruction of the object with the final aim of incorporating it, and the sexual act is an act of aggression with the purpose of the most intimate union. This concurrent and mutually opposing action of the two basic instincts gives rise to the whole variegation of the phenomena of life”
Should we avoid the elucidation or comprehension of a potentially all encompassing 'fatalistic' reality out of a fear of this potentially 'overwhelming futility and pessimism'? — Marcus de Brun
This futility is already at the heart of most sensible philosophers who look at the world with a mind that is relatively independent of social/herd programming. — Marcus de Brun
The pessimism and futility are entirely mitigated by ones potential liberation from the herd, an experience of the vast infinite beauty contained equally within the mind, and the material/natural Universe. This infinite source of happiness merely requires freedom from the herd, if it is to be enjoyed. — Marcus de Brun
Personally I have no belief in 'agency'. The Universe is clearly determined and much of contemporary philosophy is concerned with the maintenance of a contrary and empty delusion, for reasons that you allude to. However, in spite of the determined nature of the Universe, I feel there is scope for freedom, within the confines of thought. Emotional freedom, meta-thought (thought upon thought), these and more may be the true realms of potential individual 'freedom' and the only opportunity for 'Agency', and this realization can be as liberating as it might appear to be pessimistic. — Marcus de Brun
I don't know. If you want to appeal to emotions arising from emotions themselves, then you're going to get stuck in a loop. — Posty McPostface
On the whole of it, people are generally good. It's the strange philosophers that paint with a very broad brush that are to be suspect. — Posty McPostface
Yes, Socrates died from the hands of the 'herd'. What about it? — Posty McPostface
How are you so sure of all this? — Posty McPostface
I have made no appeal to emotions? merely stated that they may be an aspect of that which is truly free. — Marcus de Brun
We must disagree here, BUT it is only on a point of opinion as to the 'most'. I believe that lots of people are good some 20% and most people are bad 80%. The badness is mitigated by the fact that it arises out of an ignorance of self. I suspect that most Germans were good people in the 1940's and it is only history that differs. I imagine that the future will look back upon our treatment of global ecology and will probably assert with equal conviction that most of us were/are bad. — Marcus de Brun
Again this is a matter of opinion. I believe that truth has always been antagonistic to the herd and it will always be murdered. When it is murdered one can be confident that it was truth, until then it may just be more of the same. — Marcus de Brun
Because Kant has iterated the methodology, Descartes has iterated what the subject actually is, Schopenhauer has pointed to the usual fallacy (that MUST be avoided), and Freud has outlined the basic mechanics. — Marcus de Brun
Because Freudian 'todestrieb' is ridiculous and is the point at which Psychoanalysis begins to fail. There is no death-drive. Human beings do not subconsciously wish to die. — Marcus de Brun
.Is it a false faith that we have the ability or tools to arrive at any truth of real value ? — Rank Amateur
That is a lovely phrase "condemned to freedom". — Marcus de Brun
No I don't see how this can be the case. To deduce that if determinism is true and we are unfree, does not fully imply that thought is not free in other ways. The relation between thought and the execution of the material function that is our life, is not as fixed and rigid as determined doomsayers like to insist. — Marcus de Brun
I understand that; but, I don't agree with the Hume'ian sentiment being professed here, if that is the case of reason being the handmaiden to the emotions. — Posty McPostface
Yet, progress is possible and has been made. We're at the most peaceful time in human history... Think about that. — Posty McPostface
On an individual level human beings are motivated more by emotion than by reason. — Marcus de Brun
Upon a logical level 'ideas' the truth of things and non-things cannot be pursued via emotions or in the service of the emotions/instincts.
The contemporary paradigm is formed out of collective emotion that is validated by some degree of reason. The Nazis have their phrenologists and anthropoligists to give 'reasons' why certain humans were inferior to certain others. These reasoned-reasons were used to satisfy a particular emotive paradigm. — Marcus de Brun
Again we are at odds as a matter of opinion. If one considers the realities of global ecology and wealth distribution, one might equally argue that never before in the history of our race have humans been more destructive of one another and the ecology that sustains us than we are today. If one simply considers the potential kindness, justice and ecological harmony that might be effected via existing material wealth, and technology: we have never had the power to do more good, and yet we choose to do more harm. just look at how the demon that is 'The Market' grows towards its inevitable self consumption. — Marcus de Brun
Fortunately life is terminal of its own accord, and therefore need not be dispensed with in a hurry. — Marcus de Brun
nd that is the "false faith in your post I was referring to - Is your stated purpose " to find truth" really a "false faith" if the absurdist is correct and we lack the tools to find any meaningful truth. — Rank Amateur
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