YES to this. The character of Lucifer is a good one here. I rather like the the Gnostic concept of reversing this. The NAYsayer of life is the hero. — schopenhauer1
What an insane world. Have you ever read Peter Zapffe? He talks about how we have an "over abundance of consciousness" that provides us more evaluative reflective capacities than is needed for an animal to survive. This meta-evaluation gives us that much more to grapple with. We don't just "do". We don't just go from garbage can to garbage can looking for food, and finding shade under a tree like a racoon. We KNOW we are doing something and can say, "Ah shit, not this X task again...". Why!? — schopenhauer1
Well, it suffices to be a barren young married woman or an aging spinster, and one is thrown into the matter at the deep end.True.. but how can this topic be elevated from these practical reasons to be seen as actually a political choice? By having the child, you are promoting the fact that someone else needs to experience life, and that they should engage with the soci-economic-cultural superstructure. This idea though seems so remote to certain mindsets. Why do you suppose some people cannot think in these more abstract terms? I guess socio-economic status and environment have a lot to do with it. If one isn't exposed to philosophical thinking, one doesn't engage with it naturally.. — schopenhauer1
The Early Buddhists would probably reply to this that human life is a "mixed bag".What interests me too is molding this social mindset in becoming a compliant worker for an entity. We can't but NOT do this if we need to survive as we humans do (by social effort), yet just as the OP states, here we are KNOWING and EVALUATING dislike for this effort WHILE we do it. What an insane world. Have you ever read Peter Zapffe? He talks about how we have an "over abundance of consciousness" that provides us more evaluative reflective capacities than is needed for an animal to survive. This meta-evaluation gives us that much more to grapple with. We don't just "do". We don't just go from garbage can to garbage can looking for food, and finding shade under a tree like a racoon. We KNOW we are doing something and can say, "Ah shit, not this X task again...". Why!?
(This is also in reply to several other questions and points by you:)Yes, it is the forgetting that is the mystery here. What does one do once it is exposed? I am advocating for communities of catharsis, of commiseration.. What does it mean for the superstructure itself? Of work? Of needing to survive? Of still having to live life knowing these ideas? — schopenhauer1
It's something I've been wondering about for a while. I think philosophy is a kind of la-la land, advocating for principles of reasoning that usually just don't work IRL with real people. In general, people don't give a rat's ass about "critical thinking". The argument from power is the strongest one.What if this is the mistake, thinking that ad populum/ad baculum is "just political"?
— baker
Can you explain? I just mean that people think because the majority thinks it, it must be the right course of action. The political consequence is that the YAYs win out by default by voting with their procreation.
People who grew up with the PWE probably also have a deeply ingrained contempt for idleness and failure. So I don't think they are likely to engage in thoughts of idleness or the justification of it.Very good insights here. Do people who believe in the Protestant Work Ethic, really sustain this thinking throughout their work life? At no point does the good Protestant worker go, "God I really don't care today to do this"? — schopenhauer1
The idea that work should be "fulfilling" seems to be rather new, a relatively modern invention.Also can one be in what is considered really "necessary" line of industry (a doctor for example) and still find it to be unfulfilling to do the work?
That's a good one! As far as the religious component goes, I'm not so sure. This:Is the Prot. Work Ethic just a way to get certain people to not think about the existence itself?
I don't believe this, not at all, at least not as far as the ordinary, illiterate masses are concerned. For the ordinary person, religion/religiosity is an externally imposed chore, a ritual, a keeping up of appearances, not something they would actually take to heart or with the help of which they would make sense of the world.In the good old days, religion provided an anodyne for this discomfort. It provided meaning for people's lives. — Bitter Crank
It is also true that we cannot not do something. One way or another, as long as one lives, one will do something, even if it means rocking back and forth in a chair.Zapffe observed that all humans have the ability to access the truth that we don't need to do anything at all, that we know our existential dilemma.. — schopenhauer1
Sure, it can be a useful heuristic, provided one has internalized it early enough in life.isn't the PWE just another trope to get people to limit their thoughts. to anchor them so that they don't run into an existential meltdown?
Well, it suffices to be a barren young married woman or an aging spinster, and one is thrown into the matter at the deep end. — baker
It is also true that we cannot not do something. One way or another, as long as one lives, one will do something, even if it means rocking back and forth in a chair.
The question isn't whether to do or not to do, it's what to do and what not to do. — baker
Are you asking why should any mode of production/survival/trade etc be perpetuated or are you asking why should the current one be perpetuated? — Albero
It's no so indiscriminate, though.So another big point here is that bringing a child into the world isn't "just" this...bringing an individual into the world. Rather, it is perpetuating the ideology of the superstructure and reinforcing that superstructure. So I can't emphasize enough this becomes a political issue due to this broader societal nature of procreation. It isn't just, "A child is born". It is also, "And the institutions, values, and ways of life of the society shall be enacted and reinforced again and again with each new child". Our mode of production/consumption/trade/survival/comfort-seeking/entertainment is all wrapped up in the socio-economic-cultural superstructure. Birth is a clear YAY in its perpetuation. — schopenhauer1
Or maybe Plato was right and it's all about ideas.So combining this all together, by perpetuating more people (aka procreation) it is de facto akin to saying: The needs of perpetuating the superstructure are more important than any negative evaluations that can be had of any given task or aspect of said superstructure.
I don't make a point of thinking of humans as animals, so this doesn't touch me they way it apparently touches you.As Ligotti wrote over and over.. Nowhere to go, nothing to do, nothing to be, no one to know one to know (or something like that). Yet, we do need this as you explain. As Schopenhauer pointed out, if life was fully positive, we would not want for anything. We would just "be" and there would be no lack. The main point though is that we are an animal like all others, yet we KNOW what we are doing AS we are doing it. It is an odd paradox. To KNOW one can dislike the very tasks necessary to survive. So then the burden of justification is needed. — schopenhauer1
I don't make a point of thinking of humans as animals, so this doesn't touch me they way it apparently touches you. — baker
Well, ok. I choose(?) 'perpetuating the superstructure" – the human species – over "negative evaluations" ... So what? Or the reverse. Again, so what? Neither way changes anything. I've not procreated; but so what? ... since the vast majority have and still do and will continue to procreate, all things being equal, for the foreseeable future. — 180 Proof
I agree that it is political, but you are adding/interpreting such implications. I agree that in fact we perpetuate everything by continuing to breed, but we do so mostly blindly. — norm
I agree that we've culturally evolved a notion of ethical rationality, related to something like a universal secular humanism. So one ought to have justification. I've long thought that life is fundamentally immoral. Nature is a box of monsters eating one another. Human beings marry and breed before they even know what life is. It's only when one gets old and disillusioned that one realizes the sin. — norm
But apparently, for most people, putting more people into the world as laborers (even if there are choices in what "labor" to do) is something that is considered good, appropriate, or right to bestow on another person. — schopenhauer1
I agree with you completely up to this. — norm
I think this awareness and ambivalence are inherently human.I don't make a point of thinking of humans as animals, so this doesn't touch me they way it apparently touches you.
— baker
But this is the most important point and informs the other objections you were raising. So it isn't a particular but any society that is being perpetuated by procreation. However, we can evaluate and assign negative value to things. At each decision, we have to put a justification for why we do or don't do anything. It's usually for reportedly "practical" reasons, but even those are justifications. Other animals do not need that. They just "live". I recognize they have preferences perhaps, but they don't need justifications. That is important. At any moment, we can negatively value doing any task of the superstructure (work, chore, task, etc.). — schopenhauer1
Not sure what you mean here. Do you envy them their "animalistic", thoughtless, going-through-the-motions way of life?Yet this doesn't matter to procreation sympathizers (or agnostics).
Are you sure they put that much of this kind of thought into their acts of procreation? Or did they "just do it"?Apparently, perpetuating the structure is deemed more important than any individual potentially having negative evaluations of the very structures needed to survive.
Are you sure they put that much of this kind of thought into their acts of procreation? Or did they "just do it"? — baker
I'm not disagreeing with you. I just don't see how any argument could change the way both proactive and defensive pronatalists view procreation favorably. — baker
It's not like we could come up with an nifty antinatalist syllogism, and then, boom, people change and stop making new babies. — baker
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.