increase awareness, connection and collaboration has been to continue to live. Even though other strategies may be available, they may not be apparent, except by chance. — Possibility
Yes. — Brett
If awareness, connection, and collaboration was some sort of overarching principle, then trying to achieve this consciously would be simply the naturalistic fallacy. My argument is that we are in fact "thrown" in situations of "dealing with" by being born at all. My evaluation is that the wrong thing to do is to put more people into situations of dealing with. Whether or not collaboration is or is not taking place, makes no difference to this evaluation. — schopenhauer1
So going back to the theme of this thread...
Even though it isn't competition proper as I define it (consciously competing with others for resources, points, objectives, etc.), in an abstract sense, people are competing against life itself. This takes three major forms- survival, comfort-seeking, finding entertainment to keep one occupied (which ironically, is one reason people consciously enter into competition proper like sports, games, etc.). — schopenhauer1
What you’re competing for is the capacity to exist on your own terms, — Possibility
as if what matters most to existence is how an individual feels about it. — Possibility
To me this doesn’t make sense - mainly because I believe the primacy of the ‘individual’ is an illusion of five-dimensional perspective, and ‘being born’ is already a collaborative effort. — Possibility
What you’re competing for is the capacity to exist on your own terms, according to a relational structure of meaning and value that prioritises your consolidated individual ‘self’ as the only existence that matters. It seems to me like you were led to believe you were the centre of the universe, and then unceremoniously thrust into the real world. I don’t envy your perspective. — Possibility
Somehow we have to face the possibility that life is meaningless. That to me seems to require constant effort, or conflict, which is a battle against this threat, which is, in my view, competition. The alternative is to just “be” in the Buddhist sense of the Will creates suffering. If not then in a way you are competing with yourself, against the knowledge reason gives you, that there is nothing. — Brett
As opposed to your structured concept of being, I don’t see that Schopenhauer is dictating his own terms, if anything there are no terms, and those you do choose are existential acts. Then the question is are those actions authentic? Many are not, many are made to fence off the abyss. Many actions are carried out to justify previous actions. Many actions bolster cultural norms.
Somehow we have to face the possibility that life is meaningless. That to me seems to require constant effort, or conflict, which is a battle against this threat, which is, in my view, competition. The alternative is to just “be” in the Buddhist sense of the Will creates suffering. If not then in a way you are competing with yourself, against the knowledge reason gives you, that there is nothing. — Brett
Huh? How are we not thrust into the "real world"? I don't deny other people are in the world, also thus thrown and having to deal with in their own way. Just because we interact with each other to get stuff accomplished, doesn't diminish the dealing with that each individual does. — schopenhauer1
Something has to account for the state of humanity. I don’t see that your awareness, connection and collaboration comes anywhere close to this. — Brett
prediction error - — Possibility
The problem is that we are not yet in a position to choose the full terms of our existence, because we are not yet sufficiently aware, connected or collaborating with existence to accomplish this. And we won’t get there by halting all attempts to relate to what we don’t understand. — Possibility
What’s a “prediction error”? — Brett
In the meantime we have to live this life. And I don’t see that what schopenhauer1 and I are saying is halting all attempts to relate to what we don’t understand. In fact I see it as looking straight into the eyes of what we don’t understand — Brett
and to accept our individual existence as fundamentally unnecessary. — Possibility
Somehow we have to face the possibility that life is meaningless. — Brett
The difference is that you (or at least schopenhauer1) seem to perceive what we don’t understand as conditions we’re forced to ‘deal with’, whereas I see it as aspects of reality that we relate to in ways which can inform our understanding long before these conditions are determined. It’s not something we need to fight or compete with - if we’re willing to learn from prediction error, to contribute our resources, capacity and value towards understanding mutually beneficial methods of relating, and to accept our individual existence as fundamentally unnecessary. — Possibility
and to accept our individual existence as fundamentally unnecessary.
— Possibility
How is that different from;
Somehow we have to face the possibility that life is meaningless.
— Brett — Brett
This all comes from a view that the individual doesn't "count" in some way. But as I stated earlier, whether or not there is really such thing as "individuals" metaphysically, we live our lives as if we are individuals, which is effectively the same thing. You cannot be taught to not be an individual, I'm sorry. Identity comes with the linguistic minds we operate from. So, that being the epistemic reality, it goes back to dealing with life for each individual. — schopenhauer1
If you have the courage to regularly experience individual boredom, discomfort or risk, you may be surprised at what you learn about yourself and your relation to the world. — Possibility
This is quite patronising. You’re suggesting that having the philosophical position that life has no purpose, that it is meaningless (and I think that creates confusion) that those people are lacking courage to experience particular aspects of life, or disinterested in learning about themselves, as if they spend their life locked in their room.
And yet Zen Master Shunryu Suzuki said “I discovered that it is necessary , absolutely necessary, to believe in nothing ... no matter what god or doctrine you believe in, if you become attached to it, your belief will be based more or less on a self- centred idea ... But I do not mean voidness ... This is called Buddha nature, or Buddha himself.” — Brett
FWIW, we are not all that far from each other’s perspectives, I think. — Possibility
What is meaningful then is not an individual identity or life, but everything and nothing, without prejudice. — Possibility
What is meaningful then is not an individual identity or life, but everything and nothing, without prejudice.
— Possibility
Yes, this is right. Which means that life does not have to be competition. — Brett
Agreed. Nor does it have to be about survival — Possibility
By default living requires survival, — schopenhauer1
Life is about survival. — Philosophim
The mechanism is not competitive. This is fussy, but I think there are some slidings or context in the OP. One could argue that the different individual life forms and potentially species or groups may compete for resources or may die and be resources for others. But the mechanism is not competitive. It's not competing against anything.Natural selection is, fundamentally, a competitive mechanism based on only two outcomes; success and failure.
Though most organisms must have other organisms to survive. So the competition is not binary, there is inherent intra and extra species and individual collaboration, even between prey and predator..Natural selection is, fundamentally, a competitive mechanism based on only two outcomes; success and failure. — Benj96
However natural selection is not usurped by these observations. In fact the same selective forces can demonstrate how seemingly cooperative behaviour can develop from selfish individualistic desire to survive. — Benj96
is not correct. It may benfit similar genes in kin, or it may not even one saves a member of another species or a complete stranger at the loss of your own life. IOW you cannot reduce our motives to selfish ones, nor can you say that they benfit theIt still benefits the doer. — Benj96
And if later they are not in those positions or if in some cultures those with power tend not to be psychopaths.....? And in fact tribal leaders have no been, in general, psychopaths.Why is it that psychopaths disproportionately hold high level CEO positions. — Benj96
Are we? That's certainly how some people define success.We are born into a world where we are expected to strive for success : which to most is to have the best of everything; the best wealth, the best recognition, the best popularity and influence. — Benj96
Too limiting — MondoR
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.