One of the most difficult aspect of asceticism is describing it. It can only be lived and experienced. Whatever Buddha or any ascetic says will always be lost in translation when it is spread around people who don't live that type of life. It takes an empty stomach to understand how the poor feel. — Wittgenstein
Marxists do not favour hedonism but they cannot be in any way ascetic as they lack the element of freedom despite refraining from sensual pleasures. — Wittgenstein
The individual will has to be negated in favour of the collective will — Wittgenstein
Marxism is a theory and communism is the final product of Marxism. — Wittgenstein
The act of asceticism is in essence separating oneself from the percieved collective good and being free from the desires of the carnal self in any form, individual or collective. — Wittgenstein
Well, sure they can. They can spend money on vodka and go swimming or they can have consciousness raising meetings. Marxists in Western societies can choose between all the options their peers do. Marxist professors for example. There is always a way to aim for as much pleasure as possible or to aim for something else, regardless of income and circumstances.Marxists do not favour hedonism but they cannot be in any way ascetic as they lack the element of freedom despite refraining from sensual pleasures. — Wittgenstein
Wow. Scientism, which is the idea that the only route to knowledge can come via science, is a position that could be held quite easily by ascetics. In fact most of the people who claim to that epistemology that I know tend towards a rather disciplined life and certainly not an extravagant one. And when I use the word 'discipline' I am not being complimentary. I am using the word neutrally. I am a theist and do not adhere to scientism, but I don't recognize the materialists you are talking about, not as a rule or even as tendencies.l will not say all those who favour scientism are marxists but those who are marxists need to believe in scientism. — Wittgenstein
Well, sure they can. They can spend money on vodka and go swimming or they can have consciousness raising meetings. Marxists in Western societies can choose between all the options their peers do. Marxist professors for example. There is always a way to aim for as much pleasure as possible or to aim for something else, regardless of income and circumstances
Wow. Scientism, which is the idea that the only route to knowledge can come via science, is a position that could be held quite easily by ascetics. In fact most of the people who claim to that epistemology that I know tend towards a rather disciplined life and certainly not an extravagant one. And when I use the word 'discipline' I am not being complimentary. I am using the word neutrally. I am a theist and do not adhere to scientism, but I don't recognize the materialists you are talking about, not as a rule or even as tendencies.
In my understanding of the morality given to us by Abrahamic religions. A lot of the matters that involve morality are in fact left to our own consciousness. The books do present certain moral codes but they are not enforced robotically but with keen self evaluation. For example, slavery wasn't explicitly prohibited by any Abrahamic religion yet it is now universally adopted to be morally reprehensible. The false dichotomy which Plato presented was inherited by the theologians mistakenly and l think morality evolves like any other form of human thought.And a religious society, at least the ones we've had, demand sacrfices of individual will to moral systems determined by scripture and religious authority. The Abrahamic religions have managed to make really rather incredibly repressive societies to the individual will.
But I do not think all hope is lost on consumerism. The consumer is not necessarily devoid of spirituality and completely full of self-interest. The same is true of materialists. I even suspect that, in due time, the world has room for a completely materialist religion, one that need not appeal to gods and ghosts but can no less sanctify and make holy the world.
The collective good is never a moral aspiration of the highest order. Renouncing this world is one of the steps ascetics undergo. I don't think we ever had any time in human history where such aims were adopted collectively. Besides that, in order to understand our true ambitions and intentions, we need to separate ourselves from the crowd. Remember that the crowd has no moral responsibility or consciousness in a way an individual has.Responsibility is always on an individual.Um, no, I don't think so. The practice of ascetism is all about attaining a higher spiritual or moral state. The collective good very arguably qualifies as such. Where are you getting the idea that ascetism is about renouncing the collective good? This seems prima facie not true, as I just suggested.
The collective good is never a moral aspiration of the highest order — Wittgenstein
Consumerism is one of the terrible products of materialism. I understand the way you used the term self-interest but consumerism doesn't even allow such precepts to develop. It controls the self interests and molds them according to the need of those in control of the market. I think we have entered into an age where we can see some sort of materialistic religions. — Wittgenstein
Sure, but then, I was talking about religious societies. Perhaps they misinterpreted the scriptures, but they did this, and those that are this now still do this, as a rule. There were all sorts of prohibitions.In my understanding of the morality given to us by Abrahamic religions. A lot of the matters that involve morality are in fact left to our own consciousness. — Wittgenstein
Unless a society brings them into the law, which was the rule everywhere and still is in many countries.The books do present certain moral codes but they are not enforced robotically but with keen self evaluation — Wittgenstein
I am not sure what this demonstrates. Yes, people have gone beyond the implicit acceptance of slavery in the Bible. And this paralleled a reduction in those societies being religious societies. IOW as they got more secular. But, of course, even before this societies made secular laws. But my point was that religious ideologies, just like secular ones, end up restricting people's freedoms and choices.For example, slavery wasn't explicitly prohibited by any Abrahamic religion yet it is now universally adopted to be morally reprehensible — Wittgenstein
It would be their job to move whatever society they are in towards a Marxist state. If they all leave, then the chances of this go down. And, again, people living in Marxist societies, or on collectives in other societies, can choose to be hedonists or not. Regardless, of the restrictions in a society, the members of that society could be hedonists. In the former USSR any citizen could focus on experiencing pleasure as much as possible - and have this as a philosophy - or they could have other values. But professed Marxists, wherever they are, tend not to do this. Those who profess Marxism simply to protect themselves, may or may not be ascetic or hedonistic or anything in between, but being a Marxist tends to include a tendency to devalue pleasure. In fact one is supposed to aim at more collective goals. CApitalism on the other handI regard all Marxists professors who live in capitalist states and do not even attempt to move to a place where their world view is in practice to be hypocrites. — Wittgenstein
No,this does not follow. They can still value simplicity, discipline, social relations, collective achievements, stoicism, and so on. And, in fact, many scientists do. i don't know what your 'it' is in the last sentence, but obviously scientists believe in all sorts of things beyond intelligence and pleasure.They do not have to live an extravagant life and extravagance is really hard to quantify. For some ascetics, eating food twice in a day and sleeping for 8 hours is already extravagant. According to science, death is defined as the death of the brain. Hence, those who believe in scientism have a firm ground for themselves to engage in seeking the pleasures of the carnal self, simply cause they believe it is all there is to a human being besides intelligence. — Wittgenstein
This isn't really a philosophical discussion but more of a discussion on the benefits of living a life devoid of materialism. — Wittgenstein
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