For me, there are four things that count as needs:
-Water
-Food
-Shelter
-Medication — Shawn
Beyond that, we will always have a tension of existence, or a constant life of striving. We are hard wired to never be satisfied. When one need is met, another takes it's place. Think about if we were not hardwired to have wants and needs, what would that look like? — 3017amen
How does one counter the need for more wants, when all one's needs have been fulfilled and satisfied? — Shawn
Is life dynamically circular-as apposed to static(?) In other words, I'm trying to picture life without the need to have wants and needs... — 3017amen
I contest that there is a strict dichotomy here, a need is fundamentally different than a want. Wants are like superlatives stemming from a mis-characterization of a need in disguise. — Shawn
Yes they are different. There are good reasons why we make distinctions between them.
But accepting that doesn't necessarily move us closer to understanding your question about how needs get to be confused with desires. — Valentinus
Problems like substance abuse, for example, are not solved by saying things like: "Snap out it, you don't need that cocaine." — Valentinus
And, that seems to be a big issue in my view. To take two diametrically opposing things and then mix up their importance is an issue because, well... they are different in nature, no? — Shawn
Yeah, that's a hard one. But, a good start is realizing that one doesn't need them, even though they get fraught as needs in many cases, don't you think? — Shawn
For myself, the value of any approach is ultimately phenomenological. Am I getting closer to what is going on? — Valentinus
Every addict already knows they don't "need" it. Every addict also knows they do. Finding the leverage point to apply a pry bar in the situation is about finding resources and potential for change. — Valentinus
I don't think deciding why people are addicted, as presented by your remark about stressors, will advance the methods to help them.
You want to separate every bodies' problem as the result of incorrect stuff they think. That sort of thing is surely involved.
But don't stand in a temple and tell others how it must be. — Valentinus
I think, what you're really saying is that preferences dictate the attainment of needs. Is that correct?
If so, then I don't believe that we are all created equal in that regard. I mean by this the fact that some people have it handed down to them as to what they can entertain as desirable in terms of monetary gain or financial disposition.
Would you agree with that? — Shawn
For me, there are four things that count as needs:
-Water
-Food
-Shelter
-Medication
...whilst the rest remain as wants. But, here is a question to the reader:
When I have satisfied all my needs, then should my focus shift towards the entertainment of wants? How do you go about satisfying wants if all your needs are met? — Shawn
Yes, one's preferences do decide what are needs and what are wants but the list of needs in your OP represents a universal truth insofar as needs are concerned. — TheMadFool
But if survival is our goal, then even satisfying this list can sustain us only for a time, and simultaneously fail to fully ‘satisfy’ what may be a more fundamental impetus to life — Possibility
Our system isn’t structured to maximise survival, or even dominance. In my view, it’s structured to maximise awareness, connection and collaboration instead. — Possibility
It’s also evidenced by a demonstrated capacity to prioritise these complex processes above striving to meet even this ‘basic’ list of needs, sometimes to the point of death, without necessarily understanding why. — Possibility
Something about it feels very Kantian in my view. I don't know how else to put it. — Shawn
Please elaborate. — Shawn
Our system isn’t structured to maximise survival, or even dominance. In my view, it’s structured to maximise awareness, connection and collaboration instead.
— Possibility
How can this be true? Are you saying the are social instinct overrides the desire to survive. Yes, this seems to be true in regards to some of human behavior to sacrifice ourselves for the "greater good", whatever that may-be. — Shawn
How do you explain that fact? Why is it that rational behavior as defined in economics or elsewhere in sociology is defined as utility maximization. This all seems superficial and overly simplified in my view. — Shawn
I want what I need but I don’t know what I need.
I could go tail chasing over this, but I think that about sums it up? — I like sushi
Take salt, fat and sugar. We crave them because in evolutionary terms they were scarce in nature. Now we practically have them on tap, but we still need them, but the demand doesn’t balance with the availability anymore. — I like sushi
I guess that is what makes life both interesting though, just takes time to suffer enough and appreciate suffering for SOMETHING. — I like sushi
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