Yes, while I understand that. Complaining breeds complaining, hence the issue with the internet in general, I suppose. Instead, the logical progression, in my mind and in accord with reason, would be the utilization of constructive criticism to actually perform some change in the matter or complaint against some state of affairs. — Posty McPostface
The complaining comes first- the active change comes next. The second part is definitely the hardest. It's like someone who always thinks they have a great idea but can never quite manifest it in an actual business. — schopenhauer1
.I was playing a simple game, and I had this realization that life may be devoid of meaning; but, still be enjoyable.
.Firstly, one can say many things about life, that it sucks, is full of suffering, that they wouldn't want to bring children into such a world, and so on... But, despite all this, life is a mystery nonetheless. We came about by a stroke of chance, depending on whether you're religious or not.
.As things are, scientists explore nature and in their own way feel the mystery of life through reason.
.Religious types might feel similarly; but, instead of 'reason', it's faith.
.I will most likely never be too religious a person, although I'm sure many scientists might have become religious over the sheer complexity of nature or elegant simplicity. I'm too firm a believer in reason to be persuaded by storytelling.
.I bring up a lot of the negative aspects of the human experience
., and the structural suffering of life
.I guess this can be construed as complaining.
.But then, I am bringing up disapproval of a negative state of affairs. In this case, it is the negative state of affairs of life itself.
.It is perhaps to catalyze people to look at it for what is going on to us as a whole.
Philosophical discussion should consist of more than assertions. — Michael Ossipoff
No sh*t. — Michael Ossipoff
In the ongoing context of your long failure to support your comments — Michael Ossipoff
I answer and listen to comments to respectful debators who debate in good faith without trolling or abusing from the get go.or to answer or listen to others' comments, eventual blunt language is inevitable. — Michael Ossipoff
But, in this thread, I didn't say anything about existential-angst as fashion. I didn't criticize you. It's you who are making it personal, ad-hominem, by changing the subject to my allegedly bad manners. — Michael Ossipoff
I wasn't rude to you in this thread. — Michael Ossipoff
Engage? Meaningful conversation? I guess that's what you call your oblivious interminable repetition of your same old assertions.
It's more of a never-ending monologue than a meaningful conversation — Michael Ossipoff
The intraworldly approach might say it leads to antinatalism- don’t reproduce more suffering and that it leads to some basic metaphysical understanding which, if you are one to be inclined to like having that understanding, might be said to be “good” to have.
The holistic approach would find it an invalid question. The problem with question is that it implicitly asserts good to a) exist as an output and b) put production as some measuring stick. A problem in the first place is that we must produce. The idea of producing something itself is part of the problem, so why would philosophical pessimism be worried about it? It’s structurally suffering, so an intraworldly solution like X output doesn’t even make sense. — schopenhauer1
Again, scornful characterizations of my arguments are not going to get you anywhere in this debate. — schopenhauer1
Do you think of it as some sort of call to arms.. that I must defend my honor?
What's your objective?
Yeah; but, what good has complaining ever resulted in? — Posty McPostface
The squeaking wheel gets the grease. — Bitter Crank
I do, and I object. — Bitter Crank
Where is your complaint department located? — Bitter Crank
To borrow from CBT, there's also a gross overgeneralization being performed in that the world is completely devoid of anything good that someone can experience. Not to mention painting with a large brush, or black and white thinking. — Posty McPostface
That is not the point of pessimism. The point is the suffering of the lack that is always in the equation — schopenhauer1
Good is not seen as the carrot and the stick. Rather, the process itself, is considered either absurd or based on a basis of a foundational lack. — schopenhauer1
CBT is not a philosophy. — schopenhauer1
They are techniques for a patient who has mental functions that are not processing at a level deemed efficient by that same patient. It doesn't provide a grand vision of life. — schopenhauer1
By the usual standards of this forum, I've been unusually polite. — Michael Ossipoff
Lack of what? — Posty McPostface
I believe that it's something of the sort of being more rational rather than emotional or maybe both. Perhaps, this is the lack you're speaking of? Of being more rational? — Posty McPostface
Well, it's one and the same, don't you think? — Posty McPostface
So one main theme in pessimism is that at root, in either human nature, animal nature, or the nature of existence itself, we are in a constant state of a deprivation/lack of something/ desire, etc. Satisfaction is always only temporary. — schopenhauer1
Thus, we can adjust certain expectations, goals, and thought-processes to try to achieve an equanimity in a mental health issue, or anxiety about an aspect of life, but this does not necessarily get rid of the underlying, metaphysical lack that is baked into the human experience (or existence itself pace Schopenhauer). — schopenhauer1
That is fine. Rational is kind of bandied about in too many ways to be fully useful a word, but in this case you seem to mean a sort of psychological state where a person's decisions do not get overcome by anxious thoughts, depressing thoughts, etc. — schopenhauer1
If someone has what they consider a dysfunction and believes certain strategies to work in order to "break" a cycle of emotionally distressing thoughts, then that is what therapists try to do (if they do it well). However, no matter how "well-adjusted" someone is, they can still hold a metaphysical view that the world or that human nature has a state of dissatisfaction, that something is always lacking (whether that be in surviving, entertaining, or maintenance related goals). — schopenhauer1
I don't think so. A metaphysical view and psychological techniques to cope with various perceived (or real) mental distress can be considered two different and mutually exclusive realms. One can make psychological techniques perhaps into some metaphysical view, but that is not a necessity. — schopenhauer1
Namely, that what virtue (of such supreme importance) can be found in philosophical pessimism? The negation of life itself? Normatively we know that isn't true. — Posty McPostface
Again, you make the error of looking for some sort of results. This is the very intraworldly affairs that a PP would most likely not consider to be in the same category as that of the aesthetic view of life itself. — schopenhauer1
This is equivalent to asking a painter to quantify his artistic values with a bottom line of profits. — schopenhauer1
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