Only childlike naivety can explain someone believing that people have things other than raw, unbridled pleasure on their minds. — TheMadFool
Perhaps the hedonist can prove that people who only want more intense pleasure are wrong. That's what Epicurus thought, at least.
For example, an experiment: a rat that can stimulate itself with a lever to get more and more intense pleasure ends up dying of pleasure. It just squeezes the lever again and again and even forgets to eat.
If the human being is not a rat, he should evaluate the limits of pleasure and its consequences.
I don't think the search for more intense pleasure is justified from a hedonistic point of view. Nor do I believe that a moral argument is justified because "people" do it. — David Mo
People, like the poor rat, will do anything for pleasure — TheMadFool
This is factually false. Many people control their pleasures. This is a fact.
Why? This is the (first) question. — David Mo
The follow-up question that comes to mind is whether you'd be fine with a machine that basically just induces a single moment of ecstasy and then you die. The machine won't necessarily kill you, you just won't notice the passage of time since you'd experience unchanging maximum pleasure. We'll assume that the rest of the universe is taken care of. — Echarmion
My intuition is that I would rather have a machine that gives me an unending variety of different pleasurable experiences, — Pfhorrest
TheMadFool said:Only childlike naivety can explain someone believing that people have things other than raw, unbridled pleasure on their minds.
I subscribe to the charity principle, which has two forms:
1. do not attribute to malice that which can be attributed to ignorance.
2. if you cannot believe that a person would be so silly as to believe a proposition, it is safer to assume lack of understanding on your part rather than lack of anything on theirs. — Kaarlo Tuomi
What is the point of talking about science fiction instead of the real world? Does the imaginary assumption of the infinite pleasure machine clarify anything about real life? Or is it metaphysical speculation? — David Mo
So what if it wasn’t limited? Would there be any reason to ever disengage? — Pfhorrest
Pleasure is a feeling and, as such, it is independent of metaphysical considerations about its object. If something gives you pleasure, it gives you pleasure, be it something imaginary or real. Another thing is that you can evaluate that pleasure according to other considerations about what has caused it or its consequences. But these considerations cannot deny that pleasure has existed.If we lived in an unreal world, our pleasure wouldn’t be real either and so it wouldn’t be really pleasurable. — Congau
This is a psychological description of what men do. I'm not sure it's correct. Many people prefer to believe illusory things like Houris' Paradise or Saints' Heaven, rather than endure the harsh reality. Or shoot a daily ration of drugs to forget about it. That drug can be chemical or mental, like plugging into the TV or a console.We don’t want to have illusions either and we don’t wish we believed in something we believe is untrue even if the idea in itself is pleasing. — Congau
Yes, there are billions of them, myself included. But when we do it consciously, we always make sure we still have some access to reality. People take drugs and they do it on purpose to escape from reality for a while, but they never consciously intend to leave it permanently. They need to believe they are anchored in reality to enjoy their vacation from it.I believe that people who consciously or unconsciously choose to escape from reality in the name of happiness are far more than they seem. Especially if we include those who turn away or think about something else when they encounter something they don't like. There are billions of them. — David Mo
People don’t choose to believe in illusory things knowing they are illusory when they choose it. It’s rather a gradual process of self-deception. Otherwise they would both believe and not believe at the same time, which is logically impossible. (I’m not talking about a 50-50 belief. That wouldn’t be a belief in anything.)Many people prefer to believe illusory things — David Mo
Yes, but the moment before choosing the illusion of the machine you, or while still being aware that it is imaginary, the pleasure is not existing. Before giving in to the illusion, we can’t believe in its pleasure.If something gives you pleasure, it gives you pleasure, be it something imaginary or real — David Mo
People don’t choose to believe in illusory things knowing they are illusory when they choose it. — Congau
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