I'm just pointing out that psychology has been too ego-centric for a good while now, and that leads to the risk of developing values or beliefs that are detrimental to our shared world. — Posty McPostface
Yeah, there's no eliminating the fear of death and threats, unless one chooses to mindlessly distract themselves into some oblivion. — Posty McPostface
Oh, come now. It isn't that bad is it? Sure, we don't face lions or hyenas anymore as our main source of desperation. Which, has been a contributing environmental force to group and social cohesion. So, why is group cohesion disintegrating in the West, nowadays? — Posty McPostface
Well, yes. Though, I don't think it can be found by looking deeper within the soup of the unconscious. — Posty McPostface
How is progress made by appealing to inner values such as selfishness and lust and wants and desires? Are you not a Buddhist? — Posty McPostface
There is a difference between "ego-centric" and egotistical, self-centered, narcissistic, and the like. We must be ego-centric, focused on "I am" because we don't apprehend the world, and other selves, directly (the 5 senses and all that). There is a difference between mature adult ego-centrism and infantile narcissism. It is the latter that is so detrimental to the shared world. — Bitter Crank
Truth: there is no eliminating the fear of death from various threats. We just don't like thinking about it. Compared to death, just about everything is more interesting and pleasant. (One of the benefits of aging is that we can get to a point where one can realize that roughly 90% of one's life is spent, and a lot of it was actually quite well spent, and it was good. If one is lucky one has forgotten the fine details of the stretches which weren't so good.) — Bitter Crank
But it isn't DEATH that is the most visible threat for much of one's life. What is more present is the loss of the tangible and intangible goodies we have collected. This is where the infantile narcissist suffers the most. The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune could deprive him and her of all their goodies, and then leave them very much alive to suffer from their loss. — Bitter Crank
Families falling apart? Family cohesion is steady. A percentage of families have always lacked cohesion, particularly when society was loose enough to allow it. A certain percentage of people marry, decide that they made a big mistake, and break up. — Bitter Crank
Work? People seem to willingly spend a lot of time at work in more or less cohesive groups. — Bitter Crank
"We" Homo sapiens haven't changed. We're still the same old hunter-gatherers we've been for the last couple hundred thousand years. — Bitter Crank
For the most part, I agree. The non-conscious mind isn't all that open to inspection. What is more or less open, though, is our memories of our lives so far, and all that is at least somewhat open. And, let me add, the ways we evade dealing with reality right now are open to inspection--and modification. — Bitter Crank
I am not a Buddhist. Whatever gave you that idea? — Bitter Crank
No -- progress is NOT made by appealing to selfishness, lust, wants, and desires, fears, anxieties, and so on. Progress is made by acknowledging our lusts, needs, desires, fears, anxieties, and fantasies. We can't deal with them if we haven't faced up to their reality. And the end goal isn't to deny, or destroy what we wish for and fear. The goal is to achieve control. So, we will still have lusts, for instance, and if we are mature adults we can decide whether, when, where, and how our desire may be satisfied -- or not. We will still have fears, but we can deal with them more effectively. — Bitter Crank
One of the more perplexing fantasies is that we can be free of our human-animal nature and be purely rational beings untroubled by disruptive urges. On a good morning one can get by for a few hours feeling purely rational, but then a bowling ball of lust, hunger, rage, or blind ambition will plow into all that dry, cool rationality and we'll be upset for days. — Bitter Crank
I like the idea behind reality therapy. I'd never heard of it before. — csalisbury
Yeah, but what would life look like if nobody ever died? — Posty McPostface
This just sounds like the same thing to me. I have wants and desires; but, acknowledging them entails that I want to either realize them or limit their appeal to my psyche. So, again either we all become egotistical, and suffer, or in some manner or form limit their reach on our sanity and emotional well-being. — Posty McPostface
Why not? Isn't the cessation of suffering which we are all too aware about, the setting of the limits on the desirous and lustful nature that we profess all too much? — Posty McPostface
"We" Homo sapiens haven't changed. We're still the same old hunter-gatherers we've been for the last couple hundred thousand years.
— Bitter Crank
Not true. We are incredibly and plastic and malleable. The fact that so much progress has been made since the Industrial Revolution, attests to this fact. — Posty McPostface
It isn't, and you identify the difference. — Bitter Crank
Well, you know, we set limits on our desires and lusts. — Bitter Crank
A certain amount of desire and lust will be enjoyed, and then we'll not ask for more for a while--15 minutes, at least. Back in my salad days, I almost never stayed up all night every night screwing my brains out. I took a full helping of sex--I just didn't take everything on offer. An outing might not be repeated for 2 or 3 days, or a week, even. I like premium ice cream too, but I don't eat the whole carton at one go. I meter my decadence. — Bitter Crank
I consider suffering a given in life. It can be more, it can be less. We can make it worse, we can make it better. All our suffering will end in death. — Bitter Crank
Some people don't suffer a lot; they are lucky enough to be so composed that they are not intensely bothered by everything (that would not be me). Some people can calmly endure more pain for a longer period of time; others cannot. — Bitter Crank
So what? — Bitter Crank
I, on the other hand, have always defined philosophy as an ongoing discussion over the nature of the real. As such, I do not subscribe to philosophy as hermetically sealed off from the real. — Arne
I, on the other hand, have always defined philosophy as an ongoing discussion over the nature of the real. As such, I do not subscribe to philosophy as hermetically sealed off from the real. — Arne
So, then what's all the disagreement and misunderstanding about in philosophy if we're talking about the same thing, the real? — Posty McPostface
I said I define philosophy as a discussion regarding the the nature of the real. — Arne
In that sense, it is only the subject matter that is arguably the same thing. — Arne
At no point did I say or reasonably imply that we would have the same understanding of any agreed upon subject. — Arne
Even if someone understood my understanding, they would not be required to agree with it. — Arne
And finally and most important of all, I never insisted my definition of philosophy is correct. — Arne
if the goal is to understand the nature of the real, then disagreement is indicative of not sharing the same goal, or is it? — Posty McPostface
I said philosophy was a discussion regarding the nature of the real. I did not define any "goals" to be achieved by such discussion and even if I did, your comment implies that such goals would be or are supposed to be the same for all those involved in the discussion. — Arne
One of my primary goals is to articulate my understanding in hopes of gauging its accuracy and/or depths in terms of the responses of others engaged in the conversation. — Arne
Whether others agree with me is not a significant matter per se. — Arne
But if they articulate their disagreement in such a manner as to enable me to rethink and/or deepen my understanding, then their disagreements are quite welcome. — Arne
Neither consensus nor agreement is the equivalent of truth. Coming to consensus could mean that we are all wrong. — Arne
You didn't answer the question though, you just deflected the issue. What is the threat that society poses? A limitation of personal freedom, through taxation or something else? — Posty McPostface
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