You and schopenhauer1 are really pitiful. You resent anyone who isn't as miserable as you are. You can't even imagine there are people satisfied with their lives.
You two are broken and you want, demand, that we all be as broken as you are. — T Clark
This additional dimensionality to Schopenhauer’s approach comes from recognising a qualitative relativity to both reasonable and ethical descriptions of the human condition. Schopenhauer’s philosophical ideas show no awareness of qualitative variability - this is particularly evident in his colour theory. With a father who supposedly committed suicide and a mother who seemed far from accepting of his personal qualities, I would say this is understandable. — Possibility
Our thread troll, informing us of the official Russian view — ssu
I think an essential step toward a real and lasting solution would be to understand that the root cause of the problem is not Russian aggression but Western imperialism. — Apollodorus
Instructions for use: Attach said meaningless cliche to enemy of choice — Baden
Hagglund’s argument goes deeper than simply critiquing the idea of heaven. He uses a Derridean deconstructive approach to show that any value that is assumed to be beyond cultural contingency, such as universal notions of the good , the moral , the just or the generous , are incoherent. It is not just that we should prefer finitude over the eternal, the unconditional or the universal, but that all such assumptions fall prey to their own deconstruction. All valuation is contingent and relative. This is just as true of our imagining of a timeless deity, value structure, notion of the good or the true as it is of scientific and aesthetic endeavor. — Joshs
I guess the modern approach to mental health is get used to it! or, roughly, shut up or put up! — Agent Smith
The issue is that post-Enlightenment culture has lost sight of there being any way out of it, but that is due to its own philosophical shortcomings. — Wayfarer
Perhaps Viktor Frankl's insights might be relevant to that. — Wayfarer
it is generally the case that traumatic stress is the most usual triggering cause. — unenlightened
You think Putin has gained anything by violating Ukraine's rights of self-determination for his own irrational purposes? — Garrett Travers
Again, the rational selfishness standard of ethics is the only one that produces interpersonal harmony, or individual flourishing. You've just got it mixed up a bit is all. — Garrett Travers
You think Putin has gained anything by violating Ukraine's rights of self-determination for his own irrational purposes? — Garrett Travers
On the one hand, you claim to be looking for solutions, on the other you focus on attributing blame. Let's suppose, for arguments sake, this is 100% Putin's fault. Now we are precisely zero steps closer to finding a way to deescalate the situation. — Baden
This is another hint at his mental problems. There's no contingency plan for retreat, it almost seems to be "do or die". — Christoffer
What does Rand mean by selfish:
P1. if humans are generated by natural processes with reason (logic, rationality, conceptual faculty) being their means of survival.
P2. and if it is only through this conceptual faculty of reason that humans are capable of living a life according to the values he/she develops with said faculty
C. then the only moral system of society is one in which each human is free to pursue their own values to live and achieve their own goals
Let's start there, what's your issue with this proposition? Is it valid, is is sound? If not, then why for each. — Garrett Travers
Depression results when a person's view of themself falls so far short of who they think they should be that they can no longer live with themself normally. The psychological treatments aim at redressing this imbalance - which is of course constituted of two self-evolved and self-perpetuated judgements, not by events. Counselling seeks by various means to encourage you to replace your overly critical view of yourself with one more realistic; and to replace your overly optimistic view of where you should be in life with a more realistic one. — Tim3003
So no, depression is not a natural state of man. Perhaps in today's ever-faster-moving and more chaotic society it is becoming more and more common, but it causes under-performance and grief for all who encounter it. I see no evolutionary advantage in that..
The way I see it, there is a process to the universe in which we don’t so much serve a predestined purpose as
‘creatively intend’. — Possibility
This additional dimensionality to Schopenhauer’s approach comes from recognising a qualitative relativity to both reasonable and ethical descriptions of the human condition.
Schopenhauer’s philosophical ideas show no awareness of qualitative variability
Fantasize? Worry maybe sometimes. I do read, fiction and non-fiction. I participate on the forum. I swim. I do my physical therapy exercises. — T Clark
I don't think you understand how this works, at least works for me. The motivation to do things comes from inside me. I picture a spring bubbling up from under the ground. Just because I do stuff doesn't mean I'm keeping myself busy. Sometimes nothing bubbles up, so I just pay attention and wait. It doesn't usually take long.
I guess you and schopenhauer1 lack imagination and empathy. You can't imagine other people experiencing things different from what you do. You don't seem to understand that others may feel differently.
Through meaningful engagement with the world - namely, the voluntary identification and pursuit of goals derived from one's highest ideals (and the intentional cultivation of such ideals), assuming you've had your basic physical needs met. — Aaron R
Europeans can resist America in Europe. — Apollodorus
As I said, I'm not making any further comments on Ukraine, other than to point out that real people are being killed in large numbers. — Wayfarer
This is copypasta from an intern working in a Russian propaganda agency, right? It's really that silly. — Baden
You need to keep yourself busy at all times because ...
— baker
I said I am never bored, not that I am always busy. — T Clark
The fact that there is boredom (and anxiety) proves only that life’s intrinsic positive value is not guaranteed to us, but that it has to be “won”. — Aaron R
All I can say is that if boredom lies at the root of your existence then your existence lacks a certain serenity and creative sensibility. — Janus
War is entertainment. There's a reason it sells newspapers (or whatever the modern digital version of that expression ought to be). — Isaac
BTW, as a Slavic speaker, how would you interpret the word "Ukraine"? To me, it sounds very much like this was not the name of a people but of a geographical area, inhabited by a plurality of nationalities and controlled by various countries at different points in history. If so, Putin may have a point regarding the legitimacy of the "Ukrainian" state. — Apollodorus
Is it really philosophically correct to take for granted that the party who feels wronged is automatically the arbiter of morality?
— baker
You do know what I mean. Are you saying that rape is justified sometimes?
No one could say, yes I raped her as a self-defense. — L'éléphant
How about we think before we take the neutral position or the it-depends position.
What this discussion is lacking is an acknowledgment of the role of the power differential in moral judgments.
The one who can punish is in the position of power.
If punishment is justified, as a matter of principle, then might makes right. Do you want to go in that direction?
— baker
First of all, I don't understand your post. Power differential in moral judgments -- what's that?
Say we have a court functioning with integrity. Is it really that hard to discern fault here?
So we also need to watch our use of they-language. When we include ourselves in what we say about ‘people’, we recognise our own capacity to make the same errors of judgement. Using ‘they’ seeks to distance our self-awareness from the statements we make. It implies a passive self-righteousness. — Possibility
When we include ourselves in what we say about ‘people’, we recognise our own capacity to make the same errors of judgement.
I am not sure what kind of evidence would satisfy you. I imagine one could plot murder rates in various places vs some indicator of the prevalence of forgiveness in society. The latter indicator would be hard to develop though. — Olivier5
Or one could appeal to faith: all religions call for it.
Or to logic: hatred breads only more hatred, so how else can one break the cycle than through forgiveness?
It makes life bearable. You should try it one day. — Olivier5
Another possibility is shame. If the person feels ashamed of asking for help
— baker
But then again, repaying (although not asked to do so) would assuage that feeling. — Tex
Could be, although I don't know where that sense of entitlement would come from. Seems illogical, but we're talking about people here.
But the fact is, this is not just about NATO enlargement. — ssu
And, as I said before, if Russia loses, British and American corporations will be the first to get their hands on Russian resources, exactly as they did, or tried to do, in the 1990's after the collapse of the USSR. — Apollodorus
Putin supporters tend to be quietists who seek stability. I don't see how they could reconcile this invasion with a concern for stability. — jamalrob
This is an inevitable conflict, caused as much by Western provocation and puppet-mastery as it is by Russian lunacy and stubbornness. — Isaac