I don't interpret everything through the lens of Schopenhauer (who is not a second-rate philosopher). Why do you think he is second-rate? — schopenhauer1
The idea of "will" or volition is the idea of just one aspect of mind or awareness. — Janus
good analogy with the notion of the absolutely unknowable. For a start what is unconscious, unknown may become conscious and known. That said, it may reasonably be thought that there is always an ineffable aspect to anything: intelligence, love, fear, beauty, goodness, wisdom, whatever and of course including will, but that just speaks to the limits of human knowledge and understanding. Will is nothing special, it's just one aspect of life, or more accurately one way of thinking about certain aspects of becoming. — Janus
But it wasn't an aspect of mind.. It was simply the foundational principle that he named "will" for good or bad. It was to denote that the root of existence is the principle of striving (pace Buddhism). It does have similarities to conatus but whilst conatus was sort of an enjoyment of being in its fullness, will is a negative principle. That is to say, it is always becoming, something that it is not- at least in the world as representation. — schopenhauer1
As far as using one's subjective consciousness as "proof" that there is some striving force at play in existence-writ-large is an interesting one. I don't know that I would fully agree with that step he is doing. — schopenhauer1
So I think here you are demonstrating a misunderstanding of how Schopenhauer is using "Will". It is NOT just a psychological aspect. It is a metaphysical principle at play. It may be unfortunate that he calls it "Will" because of precisely this misunderstanding whereby it is confused with other things. — schopenhauer1
Now, the ineffable part is mentioned because if you know of Schop's philosophy, his main recommendation is to escape one's own willing nature through ascetic practice. The question remains, how can one escape from something that is a sort of totality of being? That's where I mentioned that Will has the aspect of representation but there is also the aspect of Will submerged beyond the representation. Perhaps that is how one reaches a sort of Nirvana-like state whilst retaining Will. — schopenhauer1
:100: :up:What I recommend, and I think most of us actually do, is to start somewhere and then move back and forth, expanding the picture, filling in gaps, and correcting the picture. — Fooloso4
:yikes: WTF?A second rate philosopher [Schopenhauer] as compared to first rates such as Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard and Heidegger — Janus
No doubt.I think he pinched the idea [Will] from Spinoza's "conatus" in any case. — Janus
Spinoza's idea of conatus is precisely that of "striving", not "sort of an enjoyment of being in its fullness"; that would be more thriving. — Janus
each thing, as far as it lies in itself, strives to persevere in its being — "(Ethics,
I don't see will as a "negative principle" at all; will is a positive striving for what one wills. This is something we recognize in ourselves and generally project anthropomorphically onto other lifeforms as, most basically, will to live. But we also have the will to procreate, the will to consume, the will to seek pleasure and avoid pain, the will to understand and so on. — Janus
No, I understand very well that is the way he is using it, and I think it is, as I said, an anthropomorphic reification. What else could he call it without losing the character he portrays it as exemplifying? — Janus
valorized by those practices — Janus
samsara is nirvana — Janus
We, as long as we live, are never going to lack will, and nor would we want to; it is attachment to that will, that is being unable to happily accept when things don't go our way, that is the real problem. So, will is not the negative, it is attachment that is the negative, and I cannot think of a philosopher whose life shows more attachment than Schopenhauer. — Janus
But you are parsing out Will into its various manifestations as it plays out in representation (in animal form). — schopenhauer1
Just purely uncharitable and using old canards. — schopenhauer1
I see no reason to posit some transcendent overarching Will to explain its phenomenal manifestations. I suppose you could say that just as there is the trees-in-themselves, which is thought as the counterpart of the trees-for-us, so you could have willings-in-themselves as counterpart of the willings-for-us. But I think it should be remembered that for Kant this is a merely formal or logical move and should be accorded no ontological status. — Janus
But this isn't Schopenhaurian but perhaps more Kantian. There is no "will-for-us" or "tree-for-us" or whathaveyou. Rather, there is representation, which is simply the "maya" of a conditioned existence (of space/time/causality) and there is the Will, which is a unified thing that is the principle with which the representation separates using the principium individuantionis that is illusory of some kind so that the will can present as if it was a subject-for-an-object. — schopenhauer1
Now...back to the noumenal world: what about it? — Mww
are you looking for the specific term "nominal" in his writings? — schopenhauer1
I guess I was hoping someone could transfer the notion of will with respect to the empirical world, to the noumenal world. — Mww
Kant’s use of noumenal vs thing-in-itself is notoriously convoluted. — schopenhauer1
the demonstration was the use of one’s own internal willing nature and he took the leap to apply it to all phenomena where there are forces, and animals with a striving force etc. — schopenhauer1
Thus it is, contra ↪Janus
S is not so much a second-rate philosopher as a coattail rider, and, in affirmation with ↪Janus
, a poor critic of Kant. — Mww
not even a second rater, in your view? — Janus
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