Well I think it's not so... rather the stoic would advise one to stop focusing on the misfortune, and instead switch one's focus to something more productive. — Agustino
Well suck it up can be an advice. What if someone sits in their room and laments the death of their sister day after day? — Agustino
Depends how you define "not doing anything". If whatever you're doing takes effort, then it's not "not doing anything" in my books. Simple as that. — Agustino
Don't you see the blindingly obvious: that the stoic attitude doesn't tell you not to do anything in your power to prevent pain, BUT RATHER provides you with an attitude to have against the pain that you can't - or fail to - prevent? — Agustino
I'm sure all of us want to learn and make our lives better. — Agustino
Yes, because in many cases not doing something is harder than doing something. Hence it also counts as a doing merely because it takes active effort. — Agustino
Ok TGW, so you think we can ALWAYS prevent getting hit by tornadoes and all tragedies in our life? If not, then what are we to do when we can't prevent it? — Agustino
(and this is not doing nothing) — Agustino
If you disagree with this response, then I am asking you: what should your response be? What is the response that minimises suffering if not this stoic one? — Agustino
How does this paradox of "everything comes from 'outside' oneself, but in such a way that there is no 'world' outside, either" exist in the first place? — schopenhauer1
I'm not going to go and studiously read through all that material — Sapientia
By "real deal" I assume you are referring to pain caused by nociceptors. Presumably this could be solved by technology. — darthbarracuda
I would like some examples of these harder problems. Are you referring to things like cancer and tornadoes? — darthbarracuda
But why in the world would realism require verfication-transcendent conditions? — StreetlightX
Whether or not bad things happen to you is determined first by how you define bad, — WhiskeyWhiskers
How would you suppose that the pessimist's admission that the world is actually bad is important for recovery versus the heroic platitudes of the Stoic? What makes this admission essential? — schopenhauer1
If translation is possible then the sense must be retained, which means that the logic of the semantic units is more or less equivalent. From this it follows that if "tuntussuqatarniksaitengqiggtuq" semantically counts as a word then its English equivalent must also. — John
Can you elaborate on this or give an example? — schopenhauer1
Can you elaborate on this or give an example? — schopenhauer1
1) Does the Stoic ethic provide an answer to the existential boredom/instrumentality/annoyances/negative experiences/desire/flux/becoming-and-never-being, etc. that the Philosophical Pessimist poses? — schopenhauer1
2) Is Stoicism a kind of Philosophical Pessimism or at least close cousins? If it is not a kind of Philosophical Pessimism, how might they differ? — schopenhauer1
3) How might a Philosophical Pessimist's answer to solving life's sufferings be different than a Stoic's? — schopenhauer1
-contains much suffering (empirical), and thus not good. (negative contingent pain, negative experiences in general, etc. (pace Benatar and partly Schopenhauer) — schopenhauer1
It helps to think of Stoicism as existentialism, but for grownups. — Pneumenon
For me if "Tuntussuqatarniksaitengqiggtuq" counts logically and semantically as a word then it follows that its English translation must also — John
I don't think words can be considered to be the units of linguistic meaning, because a word by itself has no particular context. — John
↪The Great Whatever "Socratic irony" should have a more modern name. Perhaps "malicious bracketing?" :P — Pneumenon
Rather, I'd like to ask: "How do you communicate the stuff that's left after the collapse of language?" — Pneumenon
I seem to remember you saying that people can't relate to one another meaningfully. Is this an example of that? — Pneumenon
For me, if a sentence counts as having a linguistic meaning then the meaning can be given in concrete terms, which means it can be translated. — John
I actually don't think words have meanings at all — John