The problem of "existential anxiety" only ever exists precisely in reference to religions and spiritualities, old and more recent.
It's inconceivable otherwise. — baker
The fact that we exist is something over which we have no control, it precedes us. As such, we have no say over its meaning. — baker
To try to figure out why we exist or why life is worth living and to make this a matter of decision is like trying to choose one's parents. That is, it's irrational, it cannot be done. — baker
Rather, all these "goods" are not necessarily only "factual" or objective but rather normative. There is an agenda, at the cost of much suffering. But we must look at this and see what it is we are trying to do here and why we are insisting on doing it. That's why I suggested we should treat existence as a political committee would, putting a moratorium on it until we understand why we trudge forth, but do this analysis unflinchingly, without the poetic cliches. — schopenhauer1
I'm gonna be the devil's advocate here and side with you.Hence the need for antinatalism as an ethic. — schopenhauer1
Why do you call these "negative"? Based on what standards? Why those standards?Suffering (with a capital "S") is simply the label I give all this negative understanding (self-awareness). Bed bugs, diseases, emotional trauma, and cancer are often situational and contingent.
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/boredom/ — schopenhauer1
These comparisons with animals seem to be very important to you. It's not yet clear, why, though. Some form of envy or nostalgia?Other animals do indeed feel pains and are harmed, but don't have the contingent-thinking to know that "something could be different". Things happen to most other animals. They don't opine that it could have been something else. They don't have the ability to see the picture of the category of Suffering in general.
So here we are, animals that can see the big picture of Suffering. That can know that things could be different, but are currently not the ideal.
To fight, to be strong, to rule. People love to fight, to rule.What are we wanting people to "do" here? Why procreate more people here? — schopenhauer1
Why do you call these "negative"? Based on what standards? Why those standards? — baker
These comparisons with animals seem to be very important to you. It's not yet clear, why, though. Some form of envy or nostalgia?
Do you think animals are better off than humans? — baker
To fight, to be strong, to rule. People love to fight, to rule. — baker
I’ve been listening the last two years to John Vervaeke’s Awakening from the Meaning Crisis. …
— Wayfarer
Yes, I have watched most of that series. I noticed he discusses Hegel but does not have one on Schopenhauer. I think that's something revealing. — schopenhauer1
as well as Buddhism. — Corvus
Isn't Buddhism after all based on the nihilism? — Corvus
Buddha was a royal dude in his country where he was born. He had everything i.e. money, power, luxury of life and thousands around him to do things for him. But he knew all that good things in life won't last. He will get old, and eventually die giving up everything he had just like any other ordinary folks.Nihilism is rejected as a false view in Buddhism. It is one of the 'two extremes', the other extreme being eternalism, although that is a difficult concept to explain in few words.
Although that essay you quote is indeed pessimistic, perhaps I have been too easily impressed by the idealist aspects of his philosophy. His dour pessimism is alienating at times. — Wayfarer
Suffering will only end after one's death. That's not a good ending. Death is unknown and eternal, forcing life to give up even the minimum existence and freedom of thinking. Life is a pinnacle of tragedy from Schopenhauer's view in his essays.The way I compare Schopenhauer's philosophy to Buddhism is that he has an acute sense of the 'first noble truth' of Buddhism, that existence is dukkha, suffering or sorrowful or unsatisfying. But not so much of the remaining three 'noble truths' - that suffering has a cause, that it has an end, and that there is a way to that end. So it's not unreservedly pessmistic, although it is not very compatible with what modern culture regards as normality. — Wayfarer
If life is bad and non-being is good, this as antinatalism advocates and disseminates, then there is no surprise that many out there will come to infer that the only logical conclusion to the unpleasantries of life is to commit suicide. Even though an antinatalist will not advocate for suicide per se, the message they send via their tenuous reasoning directly works toward this effect, most especially for those who believe death to equate to non-being. — javra
This to me is a load of bullshit. So yeah I don't follow the reasoning. — schopenhauer1
In the sense of what Shakespeare asked by the question "to be or not to be?", do you or do you not uphold that being (to be) is bad and non-being (not to be) is good?
If you do not uphold this underlined part, how would your held onto position not contradict all moral arguments if favor of antinatalism?
If you do uphold this underlined part, how then does this upheld position not rationality endorse the obtaining a state of non-being via any action one can accomplish toward this very end? And if corporeal death is taken to equate to eternal non-being, how would suicide not be just such an action? — javra
This seems massively too easy a question to answer so tell me what you are getting at please.
Meaning: What point are you driving at, or what underlying question/s are you looking to address/reveal? — I like sushi
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