I merely say it's inappropriate to refer to what doesn't exist as if it does exist. So, the question posed would more properly be stated (I think) as "Is it a tragedy if a person does not experience the goods of life?" — Ciceronianus the White
No, but people are going to be born into the world whether we like it or not, and so we do have a duty to maintain civilization for them. Society is a contract between those who are dead, those who are now living, and those who will be born, as Burke says. — Thorongil
Well, in order to have good experiences, and indeed to know what the good is, I think some degree of trial and error, and therefore suffering, is necessary, so I don't see how this scenario is even thinkable. It seems as though you're talking about someone who will live a more or less pleasant life, but a pleasant life is not necessarily a good life. And what of those individuals who voluntarily undergo suffering? Once again, I would not equate suffering with evil or the bad. In and of itself it might be these things, but it can also be the fleetest animal that bears one to perfection, as Meister Eckhart says. — Thorongil
Do you think someone like this, who uses profanity at it's extremist, and cusses at everyone, deserves hate? — Rozylee
tragedy can't exist in the absence of people (although the word is hugely devalued, someone's dog dying is considered a tragedy nowadays.) — Wayfarer
Tragedy schmadgedy. In the fullness of time all suffering will end -- as will all the goods of life, and life itself. — Bitter Crank
Tragedies befall the living. — Thorongil
Perhaps I have been exceptionally fortunate, I don't know, but burdens can be taken as challenges - how far can you carry your cross? — unenlightened
This just makes no sense to me. There is no obligation to give anything to something that does not exist. Obviously. — unenlightened
No. But reasons have no place in procreation. — unenlightened
There are women that like being pregnant more than they like having children, but in general, the notion of doing anything either for or because of a foetus rather than for the projected stranger seems incoherent. — unenlightened
That's a good question.. There is a list Maslow gave which sounded like a modern version of the virtuous man: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-actualization . That seems like just one version of this though."'What is "self-actualization'" and how would you know you had it? — Bitter Crank
When should one expect to achieve "self-actualization": Any day, now? Before one is 25? 25-50 years? Over 50? — Bitter Crank
Is "self-actualization" like circumcision or baptism--once done, it can't--or need not--be repeated? — Bitter Crank
Is one supposed to be "self-actualized" all day every day? Or is it a fleeting event? Is "self-actualization" like a 'peak experience' -- the glow lasts a long time? — Bitter Crank
Probably almost everybody.Can one die happy and have never achieved "self-actualization"? What kind of people fail to achieve "self-actualization"? — Bitter Crank
I picture them being quite smug people, but I guess if they were self-actualized, they would all be peaceful and equanimous.Can the world stand 7 billion "self-actualized people"? — Bitter Crank
Probably more Type AI suspect that it takes a concerted effort to become fully actualize; maybe Type A personalities are more likely to persist than Type B people. — Bitter Crank
Yes, supposedly they are living their life to the fullest as defined by Maslow or other models of what personality or goals these people have.Are "self-actualized people" different than people who are not "self-actualized"? — Bitter Crank
They simply want to have kids and don't think it's wrong. — Roke
Anyway, I'd say that Marx's work predicts the way capital moved and has moved up to today -- by global expansion. I don't think that nationalist petit bourgeois people are objectively motivated to enact communist revolution. I'm not arguing that point. Only that what you cite as things against Marxism could also reasonably be read as predictions of Marxism, given the characterization of capital. — Moliere
Also Marxism is broader than Marx too -- you can't just ignore the various revolutions which put the theoretical ideas into practice. Consider the Theses on Feurbach (it's short! no worries :D ) -- I'd say it points that the practical, in-the-world action is just as if not more important than the understanding of ideas. — Moliere
Yes. He wrote lots of other things, and it's a very varied body of work. The Communist Manifesto is a political pamphlet written at a very specific time for specific practical purposes. — jamalrob
I'm not against luxury, by any means., but it's just silly to say that Marx got this wrong. It ignores the international character of communism, and it ignores why lower-class peeps in rich countries would buy luxury goods (both socially speaking, i.e. capital, and personally speaking, i.e. looking for a reason to live) — Moliere
In his later work, at least, Marx's substantive prediction was not that the working class will become so irritated by distribution-side inequality that they'll revolt and install a worker's state. Rather, it was that technological development, on a long enough timeline, will progress to the point that less and less human labor is required in the process, and yet our ability to consume the goods produced thereby will still depend (because of the structure of the economy) on our ability to sell our labor power for wages -- a constraint on consumption which was once necessary to facilitate production, but will be, at that time, no longer so. The transition to a mode of production not organized around the exploitation of human labor will then follow as a matter of course. It will be obvious to the industrial reserve army what must be done (i.e. it will not take any political cajoling by mustache men with nationalist credos). — Glahn
The bourgeoisie consists of large capitalists -- owners of factories, warehouses, office towers, rental buildings, railroads, banks, brokerages, and so on The petite bourgeoisie consists of small farmers that own their own land, small store owners, some professionals (lawyers, doctors, dentists), etc. and a few others. The difference between the bourgeois and the working class is that the bourgeoisie earns its income from the labor of others. The working class person is dependent on his ability to work to get paid. Working class people earn a wage; they are paid for time on the job. The bourgeoisie are paid by returns on investment.
Almost everyone is working class. The relatively small number of people who own high-value production properties are bourgeoisie. — Bitter Crank
Am I right in saying this is more like "Three Things the Communist Manifesto Got Wrong"? — jamalrob
The trouble with the rephrase though is that one ends up with what looks like a basic statement of utilitarianism, so it seems one has not made any progress in identifying the consequences of one's ethical premise. — andrewk
So i've found myself in a loop hole of questions , i've been trying to find out what is the purpose of life, but there are thousands of "purposes" some say happiness, some say love. But that brings up the question, why do we need happiness and love. happiness and love is a feeling created in our brain by certain chemicals and is a part of our anatomy. What is the purpose of any life existence, however i presume there is no answer for this question we just are, as everything is.... — joachim
What do you think of this excerpt from the philosopher George Simmel's book?
“Valuation as a real psychological occurrence is part of the natural world; but what we mean by valuation, its conceptual meaning, is something independent of this world; is not part of it, but is rather the whole world viewed from a particular vantage point”
I'd appreciate your thoughts... — River
Capitalism is another way of arranging economic activity. In capitalism, the operation and direction of the economy is the responsibility of those who own factories, mines, railroads, etc. The object of capitalism is to extract a maximum of profit (surplus value) from the labor of workers. Capitalists are generally a small proportion of any community. Capitalists hate the idea of workers being in charge. — Bitter Crank
What are you talking about? Are you denying that my phenomenological experience is in fact a balance of the positive and the negative? — apokrisis
Does personal, first-person experience with complex variety not occur for you? — apokrisis
Anyway, you were addressing my question about paedophiles and crack addicts. Do you think their "is" should be our "ought"? No matter how good they think something is, would you not wish to draw a moral line on behalf of society? — apokrisis
So how, in your solipsistic ethics, do you handle paedophiles and crack addicts? They are just doing what makes them feel good, right? Should you be able to curtail their pleasures by introducing some kind of constraint on their lives?
And is virtue not a good even if virtue means some degree of personal sacrifice?
Where do your ethical simplicities stop and some real moral theory start? — apokrisis
What I explain is both what we need to care about and what we don't. The world is a hierarchy of increasingly generalised constraints. So something like gravity or thermodynamics are global constraints on our freedoms. And yet if we work within those bounds, that by definition becomes our degrees of freedom.
It's hardly rocket science. But the difference lies in accepting this is the logical structure of nature. Humans aren't nature's exception. We play by the usual cosmological rules. And so even ethical and aesthetic complexity can be explained as pragmatic. Organisation that reflects the "spirit" of the Cosmos.
For anyone interested in the actual application of dissipative structure theory to social order, books are being written about it — apokrisis
I think you've got your threads crossed. — apokrisis
What do you mean? Is there some other conclusion to the argument as I laid it out? — apokrisis
We have to pay attention to fostering the generalised conditions from which a concrete reasonableness is just the way of our world. — apokrisis
Sure. And we can feel the opposite. So from which "is" should we derive the "ought" here? — apokrisis
The antinatalist thinks suffering is not necessary; we could simply cease to exist.
The entire point behind antinatalism (and pessimistic philosophy in general) is that suffering is necessary and, more importantly, it is not worth it. As pointed out, mere survival for survival's sake is pointless. We want existence to go somewhere. If there is no really worthwhile goal to go towards or something that makes the suffering worth it, then there is something there. However, the pessimist says that life is not worth it and that, at a fundemental level, nothing can change this fact. If you do not challenge this assumption, then you are not dealing with the pessimist. — Chany
I don't think so. You can think suffering shouldn't exist and also understand the necessity of suffering for the survival of life as you have described it. It would just require you to commit to antinatalism. Nothing wrong with that.
To get around your conclusion another way I could also claim that pessimists understand the necessity of suffering in life as well as anyone, and that's what makes them pessimists. — WhiskeyWhiskers
How are you defining naturalistic fallacy? — apokrisis
If you ask me what is the good, I would have to say look to nature and see what it is doing. It seems to like entropification but also negenentropic stucture (as you can't have one without the other in fact). It seems to like homeostatic enduring balances (as what else could exist?). — apokrisis
Entropy- Thermodynamics.
(on a macroscopic scale) a function of thermodynamic variables, as temperature, pressure, or composition, that is a measure of the energy that is not available for work during a thermodynamic process. A closed system evolves toward a state of maximum entropy.
(in statistical mechanics) a measure of the randomness of the microscopic constituents of a thermodynamic system. Symbol: S.
2.
(in data transmission and information theory) a measure of the loss of information in a transmitted signal or message.
3.
(in cosmology) a hypothetical tendency for the universe to attain a state of maximum homogeneity in which all matter is at a uniform temperature (heat death) — dictionary.com
In a biological context, the negentropy (also negative entropy, syntropy, extropy, ectropy or entaxy[1]) of a living system is the entropy that it exports to keep its own entropy low; it lies at the intersection of entropy and life. In other words Negentropy is reverse entropy. It means things becoming more in order. By 'order' is meant organisation, structure and function: the opposite of randomness or chaos. — Negentropy in Wikipedia
What jargon were you struggling with exactly in the bit you quoted? — apokrisis
Why does life even exist if physical existence is mechanical and meaningless - as its entropic story appear to suggest? And that naturalism explains why negentropic structure is needed to allow entropification to occur. The basic unifying dynamic of existence has been exposed. And it turns out that the mechanical view was wrong. The cosmos itself is organic in being a semiotic dissapative structure. — apokrisis
It just so happens that nature itself affirms its own immanent organicism - existence as the universal growth of "reasonableness". — apokrisis
One is either a immanent naturalist or a transcendent romantic on these issues. You've made your choice. You believe the mind stands apart from its own conditions of being. You are not interested in being part of nature. Well fine. — apokrisis
