Sometimes the word "valuable" seems synonymous with creating pleasure
For example I value music because it gives me pleasure and I value charity because it increases well being.
But does pleasure have a value in itself?
I am using this definition of value "the regard that something is held to deserve; the importance, worth, or usefulness of something." A situation I am thinking of is enjoying food.
Is the mere fact that you are in a state of pleasure valuable outside of any other context. Or is pleasure only of value when it is attached to a meaningful or ethical outcome. Definitions are tricky here because valuable, meaningful, pleasurable and ethical may have multiple meaning but also may rely on each other for part of their meaning.
Is there a value higher than pleasure? Does pleasure equal hedonism and act more like an insatiable addiction? — Andrew4Handel
"Value" can be divided into two general categories : positive value (Good) and negative value (Bad). Hence, "Pleasure" is a sub-category under Good, and "Pain" a sub-species of Bad. Then, Pleasure can be further analyzed into a> physical pleasure and b> metaphysical pleasure. Our genes have predisposed us to seek Good and avoid Bad. That inherent motivation is what we call "emotions" (physical) & "feelings" (mental), both of which which have a physical basis in neurotransmitters that sometimes urge us toward "insatiable addictions. But in rational humans, pleasure can also have a metaphysical mental basis (concepts, beliefs), that some call "sublime". Consequently, if you accept the notion that excellent ideals (agape love) can be more perfect than physical reality, then you could say that there is "a value higher than physical pleasure" : Self-seeking Hedonism vs Self-restraint. :smile:Is there a value higher than pleasure? Does pleasure equal hedonism and act more like an insatiable addiction? — Andrew4Handel
pleasure, despite the claims of hedonism, doesn't possess an intrinsic value of its own - it's simply there to keep us coming back for more, all the while promoting behavior that's good for the success of the species in the game of life. — TheMadFool
Consequently, if you accept the notion that excellent ideals (agape love) can be more perfect than physical reality, then you could say that there is "a value higher than physical pleasure" : Self-seeking Hedonism vs Self-restraint — Gnomon
But does pleasure have a value in itself? — Andrew4Handel
Sometimes the word "valuable" seems synonymous with creating pleasure
For example I value music because it gives me pleasure and I value charity because it increases well being.
But does pleasure have a value in itself?
I am using this definition of value "the regard that something is held to deserve; the importance, worth, or usefulness of something." A situation I am thinking of is enjoying food.
Is the mere fact that you are in a state of pleasure valuable outside of any other context. Or is pleasure only of value when it is attached to a meaningful or ethical outcome. Definitions are tricky here because valuable, meaningful, pleasurable and ethical may have multiple meaning but also may rely on each other for part of their meaning.
Is there a value higher than pleasure? Does pleasure equal hedonism and act more like an insatiable addiction? — Andrew4Handel
I have focused on pleasure here but ironically pain seems to be a more powerful informant. — Andrew4Handel
I feel like we need to transcend pleasure as a source of motivation or as an end goal. I am not sure why exactly. But facts don't seem to have any relation to pleasure. — Andrew4Handel
A lot of species reproduce without the aid of pleasure. Sexual pleasure is most pronounced in humans but not necessary in things like plants and fish. Sexual pleasure has lead to a huge proliferation of pornography which in itself does not lead to reproduction. Pleasure seeking seems somewhat divorced from survival in this sense. — Andrew4Handel
But morality, which is most pronounced in humans seems to be most concerned with welfare/pleasure — Andrew4Handel
Utilitarianism which talks of "the greatest good" seems pleasure based also. — Andrew4Handel
I feel like we need to transcend pleasure as a source of motivation or as an end goal. I am not sure why exactly. But facts don't seem to have any relation to pleasure. The evolutionary picture has been seen at odds with facts. Are our beliefs motivated by survival and success or unemotional reason? — Andrew4Handel
Personally I don't know what to pursue. Should I pursue pleasure or some other kind of state of enlightenment? — Andrew4Handel
I think there are facts such as 2 + 2 = 4 that do not rely on our emotional response to them. — Andrew4Handel
I agree that pleasure is motivational but it seems not to value facts.
That said I think pain is good indicator of something being wrong (whatever wrong means) I have focused on pleasure here but ironically pain seems to be a more powerful informant. — Andrew4Handel
Pain is an indicator that more effort/attention is required than predicted. How ‘bad’ or ‘wrong’ this is depends on a perceived capacity to make the necessary adjustments. — Possibility
Your picture seems to be saying we are being coerced by evolutionary forces. — Andrew4Handel
sado-masochists — Andrew4Handel
Informative pain is like the pain of a broken leg which tells you tissue is damaged and forces you to take weight off the injured limb. In a way this kind of pain makes us want to turn it into pleasure. Reducing pain can cause pleasure like the sense of relief I feel when nausea goes a way. — Andrew4Handel
But pleasure only seems to inform us that we are in a state of pleasure as opposed to telling us if our body is in good health or that we are taking the right course of action. In this sense pleasure seems hedonistic being pursued simply for itself not its instrumentality. — Andrew4Handel
I think there are facts such as 2 + 2 = 4 that do not rely on our emotional response to them. — Andrew4Handel
I don't know what religious/esoteric people think about pleasure.
I grew up in a fundamentalist cult situation and they often referred to a lot of basic pleasures as "Worldly pleasures" manmade pleasures like television and concerts counted as this. However a lot of these groups do not seem to have a problem with the pleasure derived from food and in some cases alcohol.
However non materialist philosophies might have a transcendent role for pleasure.
You can probably distinguish between different pleasures such as pleasure from music, lust, schaden freude and masochism. Utilitarian's ended up going down this route in order to have a difference between base pleasures and higher pleasures. But then this adds a value judgement on top of the initial judgement that something is a pleasure. — Andrew4Handel
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