What are you now? And you really saying that you ceased all inquiries into Buddhism on account of a Zizek video? — Thorongil
What made you change your mind on Stoicism/Buddhism after seeing that video? — Agustino
(It sucks that the old PF is dysfunctional, because I have criticised Eastern Philosophy before but I can’t find the post)
It is not the case that a
contie like Zizek argued me out of Buddhism, but he is a flavourful person that can show you a different perspective, something you have never considered before -- though 95% of what he says may as well be white-noise to me. Zizek got the ball rolling so-to-say.
It is also not the case that I “…ceased all inquiries into Buddhism on account of a Zizek Video.” I can appreciate some ideas from Eastern Philosophy, Buddhism and Stoicism – like I can appreciate some ideas of Marxism – but I would never label myself with any of those positions because I fundamentally disagree with all of them.
That video of Zizek – which got the ball rolling, I start looking up other texts, videos and did some rethinking -- he made me realise that Buddhism (and parts of Stoicism) drove me towards a deep apathetic state of life, something that I can only describe as
alienation – I tried too hard to reject human nature, I tried too hard not being a human being. Brené Brown calls it: not living whole-heartedly.
Buddhist’s views on suffering, desire, attachment, ego with its ultimate
telos as Nirvana imply a certain amenable view of human nature, which I think is simply false and utopian. No matter how much you practice or how much teachings you follow, human nature won’t change and neither will you.
And their metaphysical views of impermanence, interdependence and emptiness seem to be either incoherent or too assumptive to me. I think that the fundamental notion of interdependency -- which is often seen in many Eastern Philosophical thoughts -- as incoherent, since dependency is essentially asymmetrical.