For example, "I'm afraid your leg is gangrenous, and it needs to be amputated or else you will die." Generally, whenever causing them stress is the only way to benefit them in some important way. That this has been used to justify all sorts of cruelty (e.g. spare the rod and spoil the child) does not invalidate it, but should lead to a careful questioning of less stressful methods, and the reality and proportionality of benefits. — unenlightened
what is the difference between stress and distress? — unenlightened
I don't see causing stress in others as good or bad in itself. Some things that cause stress in others are good in my opinion, some are bad, and some are neutral. It's also dependent on the person in question. Not everyone experiences stress in response to the same things. And some people might be stressed at the slightest provocation whereas almost nothing would stress others. — Terrapin Station
One example where I think that stressing others is a very good thing is when we're pushing people to get closer to their potentials--performance potentials, artistic potentials, etc. — Terrapin Station
Yeah, I completely disagree. — schopenhauer1
"reaching potential" is not intrinsically good. — schopenhauer1
There's no such thing as intrinsically good or intrinsically bad. Again, it's simply a matter of how we feel about such things. I feel that pushing people towards realising potentials is a good thing. You may very well feel differently. That's fine. We're not going to all feel the same way about things she it comes to ethical matters. — Terrapin Station
To take this a step further, being born is essentially being exposed to stress. — schopenhauer1
Why is it assumed that a new human must be born to experience stress in the first place? Does the parent's preference for stress get carried over to the assumption that the child should also prefer stress? Does stress need to exist in the first place if it can otherwise be prevented? — schopenhauer1
Well hang on. "Exposed to stress" is to my understanding a term of projection, as if stress were something in the world, rather something in oneself. — unenlightened
But to cut to the chase, I would say that stress is not necessary to life. One can very well do without it. But I think you do not admit that possibility? — unenlightened
what is the difference between stress and distress? — unenlightened
So is it ever good to cause stress in others? When is it justified to cause someone stress? — schopenhauer1
You knew damn well that 'stress' is the shortened form of 'distress'. — Bitter Crank
Organisms must endure stress to survive at the least, endure undue stress when overburdened, and seek out stressful situations to provide novelty and something to do otherwise. So it is exposing an organism to stress because it is a necessary part of being an organism. — schopenhauer1
Yes, this is rather what I thought. Rather than conceptualise stress as a particular psychological state, you seem to generalise it to include almost any sensation at all, hunger, fear, arousal, whatever. And with such a sense stress is indeed inescapable, since to be alive is to be responsive to the environment, and if any response is stress then life is stress.
But then I no longer agree that stress in this sense has any connection with distress, that is is inevitably negative or harmful. — unenlightened
... people may prefer stress and want to see others have the stresses that they are habituated to. — schopenhauer1
2. This loses its rhetorical force once it is clear that stress is not necessarily negative. It does not require habituation, and indeed the stress of novelty can be included. So you are reduced to saying that folks may enjoy life and want others to enjoy it. — unenlightened
... the rest for which we are always striving. — schopenhauer
Not only did I not know it, but also it is not true. — unenlightened
Yes, if your plan is to become the most knowledgeable man of your times - someone of the likes of Aristotle or Newton or Einstein - and your mission is to provide great knowledge and understanding for your civilisation you can stress everyone around you so long as you're getting closer to the goal. If you're the new Alexander and you're going to expand the borders of your civilisation - then likewise you can stress everyone around and make them commit to the vision.So is it ever good to cause stress in others? When is it justified to cause someone stress? — schopenhauer1
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.