I think the responses were already in hand before the objections were read. — Leontiskos
One doesn't need to remain dissatisfied with the prevalence of dissatisfaction; reducing dissatisfaction, however much or temporarily, cultivates degrees of 'satisfaction'. Schopenhaurean pessimism merely amounts to self-fulfilling immiseration (even though it aptly reflects an inescapable fact of (human) existence). — 180 Proof
Religionists argue that these restraints are necessary to prevent civilization from descending into decadence and excessive hedonism, where higher values are discarded in favor of simple pleasures. They believe that without these moral guidelines, society would lose its ethical foundation and succumb to chaos.
Humanism champions the pursuit of happiness, ethical living, and progress, with an optimistic belief in the potential for human improvement. Yet, it often glosses over the fundamental suffering that pervades life and the fleeting nature of pleasure. Pessimism, on the other hand, cuts through this idealism, recognizing that suffering is a constant part of existence. By acknowledging this harsh reality, pessimism offers a more grounded perspective that avoids the disillusionment that comes from chasing unattainable humanist ideals.
In fact, it is the people who actually went through great hardships and actual suffering that seem to have the most positive outlook on life. The "always kinda-depressed but not really" type seems to be an existence that occurs almost exclusively in upper middle-class urban settings. There is almost a role-play element to it:
"Oh no, my crush is sleeping with another guy! There are children in Africa starving! Time to read another Dostoyevsky novel."
i.e. learned helplessness. :mask:Schopenhaurean pessimism merely amounts to self-fulfilling immiseration — 180 Proof
Or, he is a New Age God, and he is LOVE
You imply that the non-upper...blah blah class suffers a certain way implying other classes don't — schopenhauer1
It's actually the opposite of acceptance. — schopenhauer1
suffering is necessary for happiness — schopenhauer1
Glad to know you solved the problems of suffering with the gym, brah. — schopenhauer1
Ah yes, YOU are the arbiter of what people should be feeling about life. — schopenhauer1
You are arguing as if you are in the Lounge. This thread should be merged into the antinatalism containment thread, because that is what it is. — Lionino
No, not at all. You can only reread my post until you stop seeing statements that are not there, it is clearly written, but I know it is not gonna happen. — Lionino
In fact, it is the people who actually went through great hardships and actual suffering that seem to have the most positive outlook on life. The "always kinda-depressed but not really" type seems to be an existence that occurs almost exclusively in upper middle-class urban settings. There is almost a role-play element to it:
"Oh no, my crush is sleeping with another guy! There are children in Africa starving! Time to read another Dostoyevsky novel."
Perhaps there is a neurological element to it. For someone who went through a great crisis, everyday life will often be a high. For those however who have dwelt forever in mundane mediocrity, life is like a constant barely-worse-than-average experience. — Lionino
Humanist Pursuits: For humanists, meaning can come from scientific inquiry, the arts, and building technologically advanced societies. These pursuits aim to improve the human condition and advance knowledge, but they can still feel empty without a connection to something greater than individual or collective achievements. — schopenhauer1
Hi, sorry if this is weird or unusual, but you just went through a Journey with me, and I want to say thank you. This was my third play through and in my second I lost my companion through the [Spoiler omitted] Thank you for sticking with me and showing me all those symbols. For some reason this all made me really emotional. Thank you so much, that was an amazing feeling. I was thinking maybe some day I can help someone like that too. I hope I will. It's not just about completing the game.
That was something else really.
Hello, I wanted to say goodbye. I'm tidying up my friends list on here and removing anyone but my real-life friends and colleagues. I'm wishing you all the best. I hope you've been well whoever and wherever you are. I hope you'll always find joy even after dark times in your life. Be well and farewell, and maybe we'll meet again in Journey. Until then, take care, and thank you.
Thanks for the kind words, and the same to you. And thanks for the best after Journey message I've ever gotten. There is nothing better I could have heard than that our journey inspired you to want to help people. Best wishes.
Hey there, I played a bit of journey again, and was showing it to a friend. I mentioned you to her because after all this time I still haven't forgotten you. The playthrough was memorable to me. It really left an impression. I'm wondering whether you are fine and how you are doing -- I felt like we had talked more but I guess we didn't. I don't know where that memory came from. It's really strange seeing it now. I still think of you from time to time and hope you are well over there.
This isn't really "New Age." It's in First John: "ὁ θεὸς ἀγάπη ἐστίν," generally rendered as "God is love." (God is also being itself, that "in which we live and move and have our being"—Book of Acts 17:28—and truly subsistent being, being where essence entails existence—Exodus 3:7-14.) — Count Timothy von Icarus
It was probably more popular that "infernalism," the doctrine of eternal punishment for sinners, in the first 300 years (this did not mean it was a majority opinion; majority opinion was that unrepentant sinners would simply cease to exist, or that all people would endure purgation and some would cease to exist to the extent they did not repent). In the Oriental Orthodox churches one finds matter of fact references to universal salvation until the 14th century. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Questions like the authorship of some Epistles are as old as Christian theology, showing up in Origen. In fact, because the Jewish and Christian Canon were still open people were particularly aware of how man's decisions effected tradition. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Likewise, visions of tradition as unfolding in history according to Divine Providence, but also shaped by the free volitions of creatures (man but also angels, and corrupt archons/principalities)—the idea that Plato was were he was, when he was to help with understanding revelation, or that Rome helped to bring Athens and Jerusalem together, and the general idea of historical synthesis driving on progress, all go back long before Hegel (Eusebius, St. Jerome, etc.). A big innovation of Christianity was to extend the cyclical philosophy of history dominant in antiquity into a spiral pattern progressing towards a teleological horizon. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think that's partly the critique, but it can go in a number of directions. Partly the critique is that people are made unfree by hedonism, they are essentially chained to their appetites and conditioned passions à la A Brave New World. They never develop a capacity for self-determination. Huxley is a good example here, or for a (slightly) more religious angle you might consider C.S. Lewis' The Abolition of Man, particularly just the last, rather short chapter, which can be found here: here. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Anyhow, the OP seems to dismiss any real belief in "goodness as such," as opposed to some sort of operationalization like "promoting pleasure," as the realm of religious fanatics. I don't think this is particularly accurate. And the common critique from this direction of existentialism and hedonism would tend to be:
A. That it ignores the risk of being ruled over by appetites, passions, and circumstance—that it ignores the freedom of the self over the self, and the unification of the self (as opposed to Plato and St. Paul's "civil war within the soul"); and
B. That it ends up being ultimately arbitrary. Value is "created" based on what? Why is becoming free to create one's values "good?" Why is authenticity "good?" What if someone is authentically a sadist, or thinks they are? Why shouldn't they deprive others of their freedom? The pragmatism of "live and let live," would of course only apply if one were not strong enough to overcome all rivals, and so it really can't be an answer to these questions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I fear that your distinction might be missing the point. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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