If you want nothing, are you still experiencing the feeling of wanting? — Pinprick
I guess in this particular case logic doesn’t really matter since what you’re talking about is human emotion, which is by definition irrational. If you’re describing something irrational, your description wouldn’t be accurate if it was rational itself. Right? — Pinprick
The problem, however, is that logic, no less, dictates that D = N. What this means is that if one is to be logical, and that is a primary goal in philosophy and in life in general, I have no choice but to accept that if I don't want anything then that entails I want nothing. — TheMadFool
I beg to differ. For one, I don't think desire is an emotion. — TheMadFool
Generally speaking, we like (want) things that make us happy and dislike (don't want) those that make us sad. — TheMadFool
This, in my opinion, indicates wanting/not wanting can operate at a meta-emotional level, making it, at the very least, not completely an emotion. — TheMadFool
The other option would be to reject the assumption that logic is 100% accurate — Pinprick
humans often think and act irrationally. — Pinprick
The idea of the rational charioteer controlling the irrational, passionate horses is regarded a noble ideal in philosophy, but a more accurate model is Haidt’s rider and elephant analogy — Pinprick
Sometimes, trying to insert logic into nature is like trying to force a square peg into a round hole. — Pinprick
Again I have no issue with this, so long as you’re not trying to say that wanting/not wanting is rational. I don’t think we can decide what we want or don’t want. I can’t make myself want anything. I just either want something, or I don’t. — Pinprick
You don't know what you want. Neither do I. Few to none of us know what we REALLY want because what we really want has so rarely if ever been an option that we have so little real experience in considering it. — Hippyhead
That's not correct. I do know what I want, to be able to have a cup of tea and a biscuit when I want. Fortunately I am able to most of the time.You don't know what you want. Neither do I.
I've deduced D from N and N from D. — TheMadFool
An instance of this will go a long way in proving your point. — TheMadFool
Also, your statements indicate that you believe logic is independent of nature in the sense that there's no connection between them at all or that if there is one, it's a coincidence. — TheMadFool
Yet, I've heard, though never personally experienced, of Buddhists making claims of a reduction, if not an elimination, of wants, and turning their backs on materialism to embrace a life of frugality. — TheMadFool
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