In the realm of philosophy, one of the fundamental questions that has intrigued humanity for centuries revolves around the pursuit of truth. However, upon closer examination of human behavior, it becomes apparent that our inclination is not primarily towards truth-seeking, but rather towards advantage-seeking. — Raef Kandil
First off, even if it is true(!) that "humans are primarily driven by their quest for personal advantage", it remains open to ask if the ought to be so. Perhaps we ought dissuade ourselves from seeking advantage and instead seek after truth. That's a view with a long heritage. — Banno
Meditation and mindfulness practices have gained popularity in recent times due to their reported benefits, such as reduced stress, increased focus, and enhanced well-being. When we engage in these practices, we are not necessarily seeking profound truths about the universe, but rather utilizing them as tools to optimize our mental and emotional states. This approach aligns with the idea that our primary motivation lies in extracting advantages from our experiences. — Raef Kandil
I love this observation :lol:. The shearing of Buddhist notions of life being suffering from the practices of mindfulness. — schopenhauer1
I think this just shows a lack of understanding of what Buddhists mean by suffering. It's something different than the way you generally define it. — T Clark
This is something that's been discussed a lot here on the forum. — T Clark
Has this been widely discussed — Banno
If you think it true, then you are yourself relying on truth in your argument. But if you are relying on truth, then you are implicitly valuing it, in contrast to what your argument claims. — Banno
And if you do not value truth, and your point is merely rhetorical, then we have no need to pay your argument any heed. — Banno
The first is that the logic of any discussion depends on the propositions of the argument being true. — Banno
The second is that if you are more concerned with advantage than with truth, you join the class of Bullshiters, — Banno
Rejecting truth is self-negating, both logically and rhetorically. — Banno
This is the poverty of pragmatism. Sure, go ahead and do what is to your advantage. The truth will catch you up. It plays the long game. — Banno
How do you know that I don't know how Buddhists "define" it? Explain please. — schopenhauer1
There are two points here. The first is that the logic of any discussion depends on the propositions of the argument being true. If they are not subject to truth, your arguments become illogical. The second is that if you are more concerned with advantage than with truth, you join the class of Bullshiters, in the philosophical, Frankfurt sense. And as such we ought pay no heed to what you have to say. — Banno
Because that is what forgoing truth is; rejecting the need of consistency. And if that is your approach, then well done, since you have thereby placed yourself beyond mere argument, above coherence, and beyond the reach of reason. — Banno
An ignore you for a fool. — Banno
Again, just restating you position without supporting argument, as if it didn't need a one. — T Clark
You act as if you think what Buddhists mean by suffering and what you do are the same thing, but they're not. I'm certainly not any kind of expert in Buddhist beliefs, but I know they aren't talking about the suffering of getting up in the morning and going to work - the everyday stuff you use as the basis for your argument people should not have children. I find it hard to believe Buddhists are anti-natalists. Maybe somebody can set me straight. — T Clark
In the realm of philosophy, one of the fundamental questions that has intrigued humanity for centuries revolves around the pursuit of truth. However, upon closer examination of human behavior, it becomes apparent that our inclination is not primarily towards truth-seeking, but rather towards advantage-seeking. — Raef Kandil
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