So why is it important? What makes it a charade? Charade from what? — schopenhauer1
It won't be necessary to wait that long. By any stretch of the imagination, the 'bubble' will have burst long before then. — Bitter Crank
I think we should make a distinction here between progress: forward or onward movement toward a destination. versus progress: advance or develop toward a better, more complete, or more modern state. I'm using the second term. — schopenhauer1
Is there something that is "shown" to us in this understanding that we can "progress"? Sure, much of it is habituation that gets stronger over time, or accumulation that gets more integrated, but it is a function of the human experience to experience this "getting better" "getting more refined" or just progressing. I'm not sure I have this fully fleshed out, but there is something I am trying to get at, and perhaps a dialogue will tease it out. Don't worry, I'm not trying to get all Nietzschean or rosy-eyed optimistic here, but I am just trying to work with this concept of progress in the individual and group sense. — schopenhauer1
I've noticed the same thing about those saps who actually believe that there exists a single women who doesn't want all men dead or in prison - they're always stuttering. So strange. — csalisbury
I don't think it makes sense to cope with pain. By the time it hits, it's already too late -- pain is pain, it doesn't get better except by being eliminated. But then that's not coping with pain, but rather avoiding or eliminating it. — The Great Whatever
In other words, can illusion really claim that the mind only "feels" like it exists, but does not really and that's the end of the story or does the "feels like" phenomena of illusion still have to be accounted for in some way? — schopenhauer1
Some people in both the idealist and the materialist camp (in much different fashions) want to claim that first person consciousness is an "illusion" of some sort. — schopenhauer1
My path is sad. The waving sea of the future
Promises me only toil and sorrow.
But O my friends I do not wish to die,
I want to live - to think and suffer... — mcdoodle
Look, is it any different claiming enough authority to say that life is generally good, than saying life entails too much suffering to justify bringing a life into the world?
Why do you object to me doing that? — Bitter Crank
Suicide ideation in this case does not mean that people are actually thinking of putting the knife to their wrist and taking a warm bath, but rather the abstract notion that you have power over your very existence. — schopenhauer1
Antinatalism, at least as it has appeared in on-line discussion forums, seems more like an adolescent game than a serious philosophical position (though some people are serious about it). To me it begs the sarcastic question of "why don't you commit suicide if being born was that bad?" I don't think antinatalism leads to suicidal ideation, unless one were otherwise heading in that direction. — Bitter Crank
No doubt. Hope in future pleasures is another attachment. But does this translate that thus future people need to exist to be attached to the hope of future pleasures? — schopenhauer1
Then you are simply making normative pessimist distinction of the difference between a life worth starting and a life worth continuing and there is nothing wrong with that — schopenhauer1
Benatar wrote about this very thing extensively. I believe it had to do with the fact that once alive, one is attached to his own interest in continuing to exist, and thus the threshold is higher. These interests in continuing to live do not exist for any particular person in the life worth starting scenario and thus do not need to be in consideration. However, attachment to life (fear of death being one of them), does not de facto make life better to have been started in the first place. — schopenhauer1
I am not a relativist, but I also don't think that everyone has to agree with the position for it to be true either. — schopenhauer1
First, I don't buy that not everyone AT SOME POINT does not feel ennui or angst. They may say they don't, but that's a different thing. — schopenhauer1
One can endure life, but not want others to endure life. — schopenhauer1
I know for a while, the big bad classic pessimists have been the gazelle you have been wanting to take down and replace with a more suitable utilitarian theory, but I just don't think it really does the trick. — schopenhauer1
It is not handed down on tablets from Moses and everyone just gets it. — schopenhauer1
Well, some people will just say the same about pleasure and pain, unless it's physical. Then it will be about how people look back on the pleasure and pain. — schopenhauer1
Taking out the fear of death and pain, then for some, I imagine there is little holding them back. Otherwise, I think I sufficiently answered your question. Life is not utter agony and that isusually not the position. Rather, for the pessimist, it is a sufficient burden to not perpetuate to others, and endure while one is alive. — schopenhauer1
I don't get this question really. — schopenhauer1
Again, I don't want to get into another antinatalism argument. At this point, you can probably dig through all my previous posts and find perfectly good answers that I would use for these questions. — schopenhauer1
You are caught up in the idea that if not all people are pessimists, then pessimists must be wrong by the mere fact that others are not pessimist. — schopenhauer1
Most people live in the world of the small. Everyday is just a day at work, a day to go home, a day to do this or that. There are negative moments, there are positive moments, but there is very little evaluation of it on a larger scale. If they start doing this, they may start seeing patterns, noticing certain things. The pessimist conclusion comes from seeing these patterns and understanding it in a certain way. Once they see this, their world becomes more understandable. Not everyone will see these patterns. — schopenhauer1
Anyways, it is enough to warrant no birth, but the aesthetic alone does not warrant immediate suicide. Again, we are not in utter agony. — schopenhauer1
The aesthetic I describe.. let's shorten it to survival/boredom/flux for the sake of brevity (still not brief I know), is a sort of inescapable understanding. One can have a pleasure and successive moments of happiness, but this understanding does not change. One does not let the aesthetic takeaway your happy experiences, but one does not find the happy experiences are all there is, and indeed fits into a larger picture of how existence operates. — schopenhauer1
You sort of answered your own questions. Most people fear death and the end of their personal identity. It's not like ending a bad habit, this is the very self that experiences the world in the first place. This is not a light decision. As I said in the other thread, not many pessimists think life is complete and utter agony where the self must be destroyed at all costs and as soon as possible. Rather, they will continue to experience the happy moments when this occurs. However, the understanding is that our world imposes on us needs of survival and unwanted pain in a certain environmental and cultural constraints. Our individual wills impose upon ourselves the need to transform boredom into goals and pleasure. Being that we can never have true satiation, we are always in flux and never quite getting at anything in particular. It is a world to be endured. One may try to become ascetic, or simply live out the normative lifestyle but simply keeping this aesthetic in mind. — schopenhauer1
I think he is addressing this to pessimists (the handful on here). The argument for him is IF the premise IS that life sucks, then why don't you just kill yourself. This is kind of the knee-jerk question people ask antinatalists all the time. I gave my response above. — schopenhauer1