Agreed, but where do we go from here? You're not using pleasure as commonly used. The activity of taking the pill is called pleasurable in everyday discourse, even though it also brings pain in the long term. — Agustino
Yes, but if it is impossible to have the pleasure without the pain, then does it not follow that that specific pleasure is also bad — Agustino
should I take it? — Agustino
So then, how ought I to decide what I should and shouldn't do? Afterall, that is the whole point of ethics, to make me in a better position to take decisions. — Agustino
Most usually what is considered good is what is considered moral. — darthbarracuda
I don't think these are important questions. What matters is what you are going to do, not what you should do, since even if you resolve the latter, you won't have taken even a step toward resolving the former (since you can just do what you shouldn't anyway), which is all that actually matters. And as for what you are going to do, it is a category error to ask for a philosophical position that says what you are going to do, since by definition only actually doing it can decide that. Actions, so to speak, do not follow from philosophical doctrines, and so it is a mistake to ask a philosophical doctrine to make you do something. — The Great Whatever
But you forget that any concept of ideality already presupposes the logical structure of this world - becoming. Hence, a world of being is incoherent and cannot be ideal. I cannot even imagine such a world, much less find it ideal. — Agustino
Sure only actually doing it will in the end decide, but that doesn't mean that one shouldn't have goals for which to strive, and deciding on those goals is an enterprise of thought, not of doing. — Agustino
Wasn't included in the memo but I would like to add that meaning is a part of what makes something good. Meaning, pleasure, and satisfied preferences bundled into one would be what I would consider to be good. — darthbarracuda
If you notice, I don't like having dialogues with you, so for my happiness I am not replying. — schopenhauer1
Kinda shot yourself in the foot there, didn't ya? — darthbarracuda
This is a case where suffering is just suffering. There isn't even a story after-the-fact that could make it such that the condition made the sufferer's life more fulfilling. Here is an example of suffering just being suffering. — schopenhauer1
And that's is their error. The problem lies in that, while they are no doubt correct an absence of "becoming" would eliminate suffering, they are not as to clear why. As we are finite states, states which are always becoming, the absence of becoming is a solution precisely because it eliminates us. If we did not exist, if there was no becoming (i.e. only logic and no existence), then there would be no suffering people that exist.Schopenhauer/Buddhism is correct in the diagnosis that life's suffering is due to desire, and that no one, no matter what contingent circumstance is immune from desire, than the optimal state is that of absolute being and not becoming. However, being that this state is nearly (or completely) impossible, it is an impetus for us to be not be happy with the situation- thus pessimism. — schopenhauer1
Fair enough. I was just trying to address the issue of "meaning through suffering" that has become the usual retort when explaining away the problem of suffering.You are too kind there. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The fact such a fulfilling event is given with suffering is always just a frustrating coincidence. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Again, I point to what I said above. Some people think the annoyances, tribulations, pain, what have you give them meaning (usually in hindsight). I agree with you in a really roundabout way that, this in itself is telling of life if we can't handle even just tranquility that we must gain meaning from painful experiences.People may find fulfilment in the passing of suffering and achieving something. Frequently, people are happy about experiencing an annoyance of hard work to finally achieve something which wouldn't have happened otherwise. But what exactly is fulfilling for these people? Is it the annoyance of work? Is it the suffering? Not at all. In such cases, it is the end of suffering and creation of something worthwhile which is fulfilling. The suffering itself was just a useless burden. — TheWillowOfDarkness
To me, this is equivalent. I mean, making lemonade out of lemons.. all that jazz. But I think you are trying to say the super-hero Stoic variety that Agustino seems really into- the idea that we can be come impervious to pain. I brought up several ideas in objection to this:You and darthbarracuda are approaching the question of Stoicism from the wrong angle. Stoicism isn't a question of making suffering "worth it." Nothing can to that. It's an oxymoron. Rather Stoicism is about holding a particular stance which brings fulfilment regardless of suffering. Or in some cases, to replace (e.g. someone's understanding life is now worthless because the were dumped) some instances of suffering with fulfilment (e.g. "sometimes bad things happen. I shouldn't let that conquer me" ) . — TheWillowOfDarkness
I think I agree? You have a peculiar way of making something that we mostly agree on seem totally inimical to each other. Why be so belligerent?And that's is their error. The problem lies in that, while they are no doubt correct an absence of "becoming" would eliminate suffering, they are not as to clear why. As we are finite states, states which are always becoming, the absence of becoming is a solution precisely because it eliminates us. If we did not exist, if there was no becoming (i.e. only logic and no existence), then there would be no suffering people that exist. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If we are to eliminate instance of suffering, it is a question of having particular moments of becoming, not suffering, as opposed to other moments of becoming, suffering.
This is what Stoicism seeks to achieve. To have us exist, to react, to be "becoming," which is the absence of suffering rather than the presence of suffering in as many instances as possible. — TheWillowOfDarkness
don't think these are important questions. What matters is what you are going to do, not what you should do, since even if you resolve the latter, you won't have taken even a step toward resolving the former (since you can just do what you shouldn't anyway), which is all that actually matters. — The Great Whatever
In any case, it's not the job of an ethical doctrine to tell what to do: as I've argued, I don't think this demand even makes sense. — The Great Whatever
Nothing can tell you what to do, only doing something can make you do something. — Teh GreatWhatever
But it can and it does, otherwise I'd just do whatever the hell I wanted all the time without consideration for what's right. But I don't do that., and neither do most people. — Marchesk
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