Sometimes our attempts to avoid suffering - such as the self-deceptive behaviour necessary for the survival of a miserly relationship - becomes the root cause of the very mental anguish that we end up prolonging through the self-deception. It is like smoking; you deceive yourself thinking the cigarette will help alleviate the stress, but it soon forms into a habit that you become dependent on that without it you fear you will suffer as it slowly kills you. The cycle of self-deceit. Subjective suffering such as anxiety and depression really only exists because our bodies and emotions are attempting to convey the truth that we are unable to articulate, just as our lungs cough out the truth about cigarettes.Given the above is true what can we say about suffering? Suffering seems to be a higher-order pain since it includes mental anguish too. However, consider the causes of mental anguish from failing in exams to losing in love - they're all critical aspects of social survival. We can literally see the similarity between physical and mental pain at a very fundamental level - SURVIVAL, either as an individual or as a member of society.
Therefore, suffering is necessary to the wellbeing of individuals alone and as members of a society. — TheMadFool
I think 'survival' is self-deceptive. It is just fear. — TimeLine
What kind of ramifications would this realization have?
For one, we can do away with pessimistic philosophies that have, well, misunderstood the whole point of suffering. They think suffering shouldn't exist, implying that it is unnecessary, which I've shown is actually necessary for survival. — TheMadFool
You can think suffering shouldn't exist and also understand the necessity of suffering for the survival of life as you have described it. It would just require you to commit to antinatalism. Nothing wrong with that. — WhiskeyWhiskers
To get around your conclusion another way I could also claim that pessimists understand the necessity of suffering in life as well as anyone, and that's what makes them pessimists. — WhiskeyWhiskers
Well, then that makes antinatalism irrational.
Necessary things cannot be avoided, as is the case. It then becomes irrational to think it shouldn't exist. — TheMadFool
Therefore, suffering is necessary to the wellbeing of individuals alone and as members of a society. — TheMadFool
What kind of ramifications would this realization have?
For one, we can do away with pessimistic philosophies that have, well, misunderstood the whole point of suffering. They think suffering shouldn't exist, implying that it is unnecessary, which I've shown is actually necessary for survival. — TheMadFool
Well, then that makes antinatalism irrational.
Necessary things cannot be avoided, as is the case. It then becomes irrational to think it shouldn't exist. — TheMadFool
Some would think it irrational to be so overly concerned with an inevitable. — TheMadFool
Suffering is necessary in life, but life is not necessary. So suffering can be avoided, and that can be desirable depending on your moral framework. I don't see what's irrational about that. Want to provide an argument instead of an adjective? — WhiskeyWhiskers
What I was attempting to convey was that sometimes survival itself is imagined, so while the function is there, it doesn't necessarily need to be there. A cognitive, instinctual confusion. The fear of pain and hurt can lead to an avoidance of what the actual reasons are that are causing you the pain and so one simply prolongs the suffering.You're right, it is fear; fear of pain, injury, hurt, anguish, death, etc. all of which are about survival - in a relationship, in a group of friends, in a community, etc.
Granted avoidance behavior perpetuates suffering but this in no way means that avoidance doesn't have a survival function. — TheMadFool
A rose has its thorns and yet the blossoms are beautiful to behold. Evaluating a rose soley on the basis of its pain-inducing thorns is a morbidly constricted worldview. It ignores the other significant side of the coin viz. happiness. In rational analysis it is mandatory to understand the whole issue to have any chance of a fair and reasonable evaluation. Since pessimistic philosophies obviously fail in this deparment by unduly focussing on suffering, I consider them as irrational. — TheMadFool
The expected retort of the pessimist would be that, in life, suffering is far greater than happiness. There's a simple but effective reply to such a POV - that most people are content with what life has to offer, the clearest indication of which is the absence of mass suicides. Of course one could say that this is because people haven't given much thought to the issue and thus go on living their lives despite the immense amount of suffering. My reply to this is that it is not a lack of deliberation on the issue. If it were that then there should be a conspicuous absence of pessimists. Yet, we seem pessimistic people happily selling their philosophy to the world. As you can see, pessimistic philosophy is self-contradictory and so, is irrational. — TheMadFool
As you can see, pessimistic philosophy is self-contradictory and so, is irrational. — TheMadFool
The fear of pain and hurt can lead to an avoidance of what the actual reasons are that are causing you the pain and so one simply prolongs the suffering — TimeLine
The fact you picked a rose for your example in the first place shows you're beginning with the conclusion that life is actually comparable to a rose; that on balance it's more positive in spite of its negatives. And life isn't necessarily roses and a few thorns for a lot of people in the world, and I could just as easily point to lots of things as symbolic of life that we could easily agree we would be better off without. But we can throw dumb analogies at each other all day — WhiskeyWhiskers
But anyway, why is the weight pessimists give to suffering undue? They give suffering a different moral value than you do. Why do you have the correct valuation and they don't? — WhiskeyWhiskers
Because I care — WhiskeyWhiskers
Suffering exposes nothing but the failure of evolution.Do you mean some people have an avoidance behavior that prevents them from facing the real cause of their suffering? By that do you mean suffering fails to achieve what it was evolved for? — TheMadFool
Suffering exposes nothing but the failure of evolution. — TimeLine
A rose has its thorns and yet the blossoms are beautiful to behold. Evaluating a rose soley on the basis of its pain-inducing thorns is a morbidly constricted worldview. It ignores the other significant side of the coin viz. happiness. In rational analysis it is mandatory to understand the whole issue to have any chance of a fair and reasonable evaluation. Since pessimistic philosophies obviously fail in this deparment by unduly focussing on suffering, I consider them as irrational. — TheMadFool
There's a simple but effective reply to such a POV - that most people are content with what life has to offer, the clearest indication of which is the absence of mass suicides. Of course one could say that this is because people haven't given much thought to the issue and thus go on living their lives despite the immense amount of suffering. My reply to this is that it is not a lack of deliberation on the issue. If it were that then there should be a conspicuous absence of pessimists. Yet, we seem pessimistic people happily selling their philosophy to the world. As you can see, pessimistic philosophy is self-contradictory and so, is irrational. — TheMadFool
I don't think so. You can think suffering shouldn't exist and also understand the necessity of suffering for the survival of life as you have described it. It would just require you to commit to antinatalism. Nothing wrong with that.
To get around your conclusion another way I could also claim that pessimists understand the necessity of suffering in life as well as anyone, and that's what makes them pessimists. — WhiskeyWhiskers
The antinatalist thinks suffering is not necessary; we could simply cease to exist.
The entire point behind antinatalism (and pessimistic philosophy in general) is that suffering is necessary and, more importantly, it is not worth it. As pointed out, mere survival for survival's sake is pointless. We want existence to go somewhere. If there is no really worthwhile goal to go towards or something that makes the suffering worth it, then there is something there. However, the pessimist says that life is not worth it and that, at a fundemental level, nothing can change this fact. If you do not challenge this assumption, then you are not dealing with the pessimist. — Chany
Therefore, suffering is necessary to the wellbeing of individuals alone and as members of a society.
What kind of ramifications would this realization have?
For one, we can do away with pessimistic philosophies that have, well, misunderstood the whole point of suffering. They think suffering shouldn't exist, implying that it is unnecessary, which I've shown is actually necessary for survival. — TheMadFool
Assuming pessimist philosophers have never considered pleasure in their thinking is folly. — Chany
I quite specifically stated the truth of the pessimist position is irrelevant of the one presenting the argument. Even if no one claimed they supported the argument, the argument would still hold ground on its own merits and would have to be dealt with as such. — Chany
When I had a car accident, my leg was in incredible pain and I suffered from severe angina-like pain induced by myocardial contusion [together with anxiety] for several months afterwards. Having no car and being on my own, I had to walk 4k in that pain just to get something to eat. Add PTSD to that, constant trembling, fear, unable to sleep, weight loss. The latter was entirely subjective and the worst experience I have ever had.I don't think evolution has failed at all. Just survey the natural world. All animals have a pain system. What we don't see are painless organisms - did they lose the survival race? I think so. — TheMadFool
But suffering? — TimeLine
I read this on a T-shirt:
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is an option.
What say? — TheMadFool
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.