There are two different causes in play here — TheMadFool
There are two different causes in play here - one is knowledge that you like tea and the other is the enjoyment you experience when you're actually drinking the tea. — TheMadFool
No. you are still confused; unconfuse yourself. Causes come before effects. The question is why does Mrs un make tea? The answer is 'her motivation' which is something in her head. That's it not the tea, not me enjoying tea or her enjoying tea, because there is no tea - she hasn't made it yet. It a thought that causes her to make tea, and there is no reason why it has to be a thought about her pleasure and not about mine. Indeed when she makes tea for me, it would be silly for her to thinking about her pleasure and not mine - she'd go and put sugar in it - ugh! — unenlightened
What is the nature of this 'motivation' may I ask? — TheMadFool
Of me drinking tea with pleasure. — unenlightened
Right. well Mrs un cannot value the tea she makes for me only for the happiness she derives from it because the happiness she derives comes not from the tea but from my happiness. — unenlightened
No, the cause can only be the imagined pleasure, — unenlightened
If the answer is "yes" then I'd be pleasantly surprised and would like to request you to tell us what that is that's worth hellfire? Love? Immortality? — TheMadFool
The pain is worth the gain. In other words masochism passes the hedonism test.I believe there are limits to the pain even a masochist will/can endure. However, it does appear that the difference between pain and pleasure gets blurred in masochism. Nevertheless, there is pleasure involved; it's just in a roundabout way. — TheMadFool
I don't differentiate between imagined and real pleasure. — TheMadFool
How do you torture a masochist?
Be loving toward him! — Frank Apisa
And now my question. Why do y'all want to deny that one can be unselfish so determinedly? What is at stake for you? — unenlightened
Don't be a complete dick! You know the difference between imagining the pleasure of eating an ice cream and the pleasure of eating an ice cream. No, this level of bullshit, I cannot be bothered with. — unenlightened
What causes Mrs un to make a cup of tea? Obviously, it is not the pleasure of drinking it, because causes have to precede their effects, and the pleasure of drinking always comes after the making. No, the cause can only be the imagined pleasure, and this is the fundamental nature of desire, that it is formed of images from memory that are given an imagined value also from memory and to act according to one's desires is to attempt to realise those images. — unenlightened
unenlightened
4.4k
How do you torture a masochist?
Be loving toward him!
— Frank Apisa
That won't work at all because a masochist enjoys being tortured. Obviously you have to torture a masochist by kindly indulging her with the torture she loves, which she will hate, which she will love, which she will hate, which she will love...
Or possibly, life is not quite that one-dimensional. — unenlightened
However, her imagination lets her know that you will find it pleasurable to drink tea. I guess this is what you refer to by imagined pleasure. — TheMadFool
Identification is selfish, empathy is otherish. — unenlightened
even if the actual pleasure temporally succeeds the plan, the anticipation of it is the plan's maternity ward. — TheMadFool
I think auto-correct is eating your brain. :cry:
So an architect imagines a building and draws plans from his imagination. And one day, planners permitting, and client's finances permitting, some builders realise his plan. And possibly it is a hospital, with a maternity ward. These things happen. And this, for all concerned, is all about pleasure, anticipated and experienced? What makes you think that? Why don't they all smoke crack instead? — unenlightened
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.