Surprisingly, Jesus does not say how happy are the lottery winners, those whose wives give great head, popular politicians, and receivers of honours, emmys, baftas, Nobel laureates, etc or people who are well tranquillised. — unenlightened
I don't see how this follows. — Wallows
Can anyone elaborate as to why isn't happiness a choice?
I mean we all want it, and even it seems some need it; but, very recently I view it as a choice between competing interests. At the moment I have no competing interests or wants and kinda feel happy.
What would you do? — Wallows
our highest pleasure is to be found in discovering the meaning of life and living accordingly — TheMadFool
I would instead say that the highest pleasure is for life to feel meaningful, the feeling I call ontophilia or love of being; and the meaning of life is to bring pleasure, to oneself and to others. The meaning of life is thus to make life seem meaningful. And there is nothing more to meaningfulness than the seeming of it: seeming meaningful is being meaningful.
All that’s left is to ask what, generally, seems meaningful, and I answer that is is learning, teaching, loving, and being loved: having both goods and truths flow through you, from the world into you and from you into the world. — Pfhorrest
hedonism — TheMadFool
Hedonism has this ability to subsume everything. There is no way to refute it because, the most frequently presented "counter-examples" to it can easily be reworked into a form that is in its favor, just like you have. If I must say anything at this point is that a theory that explains everything explains nothing. — TheMadFool
If I must say anything at this point is that a theory that explains everything explains nothing. — TheMadFool
Aren't those quite high expectations? Maybe some can get by with less? — Wallows
You could say the same thing about empiricism with equal(ly little) justification. Hedonism is just the empiricism of ethics: judging assessments of goodness based on the experience of them seeming good. It's not a statement about what people do value, meant to predict people's behavior, but about what is valuable, meant to adjudicate normative claims.
Anyway, I was agreeing with you (that meaningfulness is the highest pleasure), just with slight adjustments and elaboration. — Pfhorrest
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