I just thought the point about celibacy makes sense in a Schopenhauerian context. — schopenhauer1
Perhaps so, but it doesn't make much sense to me in general. It seems, ironically, an excessive response to perceived excess, and one which is likely to result in increased stress due to unfulfilled desires - and to what end? Is that supposed to be a guide to self-improvement or misery? Or perhaps both. All I have to do is live a life of misery, and I'll be a better person. — Sapientia
This is a good point. I have never understood how the ascetic is supposed to forget the reason they are being an ascetic in the first place. Case in point: celibacy, if you are celibate, chances are you will have pent-up sexual urges and desires which will only remind you of the very thing you are trying to evade. It seems that asceticism is a reaction to a distasteful environment rather than a genuine sustainable way of life. — darthbarracuda
I think the point is to get off the merry-go-round of desire altogether. Whether that can actually happen, I do not know. — schopenhauer1
But I think that is the goal. — schopenhauer1
I think the misery here is thinking that the obtaining of desires will make you satisfied when everything is in flux and impermanent. What seems satisfying at one point, may not be later and so forth. — schopenhauer1
This is a long journey to stop the flux- diminishing it to null or near null so that one is at peace just "being" without becoming. — schopenhauer1
What do you mean you don't know? Of course it cannot happen, unless by brain damage or death. — Sapientia
So you're implying that satisfaction is not obtainable because what "seems" to be satisfying is only temporary? Well, that's mistaken. It doesn't merely "seem" satisfying to fulfill desires; it is satisfying. And that it is only temporary is of little significance. The goal was not permanent satisfaction to begin with (which is, strictly speaking, impossible). It doesn't follow that temporary satisfaction is not worth obtaining simply by virtue of it's temporality. — Sapientia
But that journey only makes sense if you mistakenly assume that desire inevitability leads to a disharmony which outweighs the alternative in terms of overall benefit. It's better to live which includes the fulfillment of desires, within reason and despite the occasional disappointments, than the alternative which you've proposed - which is very unlikely to succeed. Someone mentioned the story if the Buddha earlier, and I agree with the moral of that story, as I understand it, which eschews this extreme and misguided way of living, without eschewing moderation and a balanced lifestyle. — Sapientia
That's not what they think. Can we turn the rhetoric down from 11? Perhaps to a cool 2 or 3? — schopenhauer1
You've misunderstood. I didn't claim that that's what they think. That's my response to your point, which was "to get off the merry-go-round of desire altogether", and that you don't know whether that's possible. I was informing you that it's not possible, except via brain damage or death. — Sapientia
I think the point is to get off the merry-go-round of desire altogether. — schopenhauer1
Yes, that will perhaps be the ultimate demise, but again, they supposedly wouldn't care at that point or right before they lose consciousness I guess. — schopenhauer1
For the record, it's easy to defend the common sense view of things and phrases like "everything in moderation, including moderation". This is what is so appealing about Aristotle's "Golden Mean" and pragmatists view of "do what works". — schopenhauer1
The theory is that dissatisfaction comes from constant craving. I am not going to pretend that I can defend the whole corpus of ascetic thought. I'm sure others can do a much better job of this. However, from what I know cravings bring unhappiness because it can be frustrated, short-lived, and ultimately leads to more feelings of need and want. If satisfaction is temporary, then that means the longing for satisfaction is near-constant. This longing for satisfaction has its own suffering as now your happiness is dependent on obtaining something you do not already have. That is the normal state of things. This is trying to move to a non-normal state of things where one is not dependent on obtaining what one does not already have. One dies a death of starvation, but if one has prepared oneself for it, one will not find this disturbing but in some way sublime. Again, I don't know if this is ever obtainable myself. But as usual, because of the way people on this forum react (super high charged rhetoric, smugness, etc.) this now turns into a black and white issue without nuance or compromise. — schopenhauer1
Most people, I'd hazard to say, are content most of the time, and would affirm that that is the case, if asked. — Sapientia
I think the issue that Schopenhauer1 is bringing up is not necessarily that life is always a burden, but rather when analyzed from an objective third person perspective, it could easily be said that each and every one of us live our lives "chasing the cheese", so to speak. It is quite nihilistic and useless. When we take a look at what our lives are constituted by and see just how much time we spend pursuing empty pleasures and needs, it really does drive a nail through our appreciation of life. — darthbarracuda
Firstly, to state that it is "quite nihilistic and useless" doesn't make much sense to me, except in relation to a particular context, so I would like to know what context you have in mind here. — Sapientia
And secondly, isn't whether or not such acts are "empty" a subjective matter, and hence will depend on the subject, and, more specifically, his or her values? — Sapientia
The context would be life. What goal is life itself, the chemical reactions itself, leading towards? There is no goal. Life is without a goal and without a direction; it is therefore unnecessary. — darthbarracuda
I suppose it depends on how versatile one's mind is and how able they are to compartmentalize aspects of their life so that they can maintain meaning and purpose in a thoroughly nihilistic world. — darthbarracuda
I think the issue that Schopenhauer1 is bringing up is not necessarily that life is always a burden, but rather when analyzed from an objective third person perspective, it could easily be said that each and every one of us live our lives "chasing the cheese", so to speak. It is quite nihilistic and useless. When we take a look at what our lives are constituted by and see just how much time we spend pursuing empty pleasures and needs, it really does drive a nail through our appreciation of life. — darthbarracuda
Personally, I find all this talk of telos and natural law to be a bit unscientific and definitely problematic in terms of the is-ought gap. The Catholic Church tries to defend natural law by saying that natural, male-female sex during marriage is the only way to achieve human flourishing - a doctrine that I find blatantly absurd. — darthbarracuda
Straight marriages produce gay men, so keep up the good work! — Bitter Crank
Priests don't assent to anti-natalism, but very specifically believe in being fruitful and multiplying — Hanover
Do you guys really think that celibacy is the cure to your various physical and emotional challenges or is that just a comforting thing to tell yourself because you aren't getting laid? — Hanover
celibacy, if you are celibate, chances are you will have pent-up sexual urges and desires which will only remind you of the very thing you are trying to evade. — darthbarracuda
What do you do when you realise you're desiring not to desire? — WhiskeyWhiskers
No, for once again, these desires are not pent up but rather redirected towards other things or dissipated to such an extent that they no longer trouble one. — Thorongil
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