If so, humans being (most) self-aware, are suffering (the most).
Draw your own conclusions... — Agent Smith
We're caught in a trap of sorts - we don't like it (life) and so, we search for justifications to like it (life). That's positive thinking on a whole new level, oui? — Agent Smith
Algos & Thanatos (deadly duo of suffering) force us to imagine stuff like souls, the very essence of selves, that somehow survive both kinds of suffering...to live happily ever after. A fairy tale. — Agent Smith
Our "spirtual" glory says Freddy – amor fati! :fire:If so, humans being (most) self-aware, are suffering (the most). — Agent Smith
Our "spirtual" glory says Freddy – amor fati! :fire: — 180 Proof
I advocate intellectual and moral courage (i.e. ataraxia, ekstasis, non serviam, carpe diem, sapere aude, ...) Whether or not this makes me a 'fatalist', that's not the same as being futilitarian.Are you advocating fatalism? — Agent Smith
I advocate intellectual and moral courage (i.e. ataraxia, ekstasis, non serviam, carpe diem, sapere aude, ...) Whether or not this makes me a 'fatalist', that's not the same as being futilitarian — 180 Proof
Nothing is "justified", existence doesn't require "justification" (e.g. Zapffe, Camus, Cioran, Rosset) – being here now is gratuitous. — 180 Proof
Someone shouldn't complain that life is unfair unless they have full knowledge of their innocence. Job thought he was perfect but in the trial proved not to be — Gregory
The paradox: Suffering, instead of making people averse to birthing children (end suffering), encourages them to opt for larger families (share suffering). — Agent Smith
I don't think that is suffering as much as traditional cultures. Value is gotten from playing the role of parent. Women think they are being a true woman by birthing. As women and cultures in general become more Westernized, roles such as "careers" become more valued. To me, both values are patently wrong and working out of bad faith.
Also note, the minute you create a person who must "learn to play a game" (like the game of life, the economy, learning to live in a society a certain way), that action becomes morally disqualified. You are forcing someone into a comply or die situation. No one needs to play the game of life. You (the parent) are not a messiah bringing about someone else's curated experiences. No person needs to be born to learn anything. This is delusional messianic thinking on the part of the parent. — schopenhauer1
Why do people have children? — Agent Smith
None of this is moral to create for someone else. — schopenhauer1
What if I just don't care that life guarantees suffering? — Moses
Then you are simply using people because suffering is the basis for ethics. If not suffering and it is another X reason, I can only see that as using people.What if I don't view all suffering as bad? — Moses
Then you are using people to bring about some messianic cause of yours (to teach people X).Suffering can be a great teacher. — Moses
Even if this is true, CAUSING someone to suffer so that they can empathize is wrong. It is moral paternalism in its worst sense to believe that YOU are here so that you can bring ANOTHER PERSON into the worlds so that THEY can produce X outcome that YOU want to see out of them. No.Suffering allows one to empathize. — Moses
OU are here so that you can bring ANOTHER PERSON into the worlds so that THEY can produce X outcome that YOU want to see out of them. — schopenhauer1
yet instead they prefer to stay, suffer and push their decrepit view onto other people. — M777
-You seemingly define "doing good" as preference fulfillment while I view this as shallow. I think there's a deeper level to a person beyond one's preferences. I don't feel obliged to help the alcoholic acquire drinks or the disabled facilitate their own internalized ableism. — Moses
What grounds dignity? IMHO not anything in nature, not anything in the material world. You ever see a man in a wheelchair with spit dripping out of his mouth as he takes 30 seconds on his name? We could go on. Nature doesn't ground dignity. Neither does reason. That needs to be transcendental. Do pigs have dignity? Then why do humans if humans are just animals? Exodus 4:10 provides a grounding of dignity. — Moses
EDIT: I can't tell how you ground morality: Human reason? Nature? From where does it find its source. You say that people need to be valued in and of themselves but I don't know from where you reach this conclusion. — Moses
You don't get it. It isn't about me. It's about making things better and life is good. Morality can conflict with one's personal wishes so this isn't about what I want. It's just about the good. — Moses
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