So one main theme in pessimism is that at root, in either human nature, animal nature, or the nature of existence itself, we are in a constant state of a deprivation/lack of something/ desire, etc. Satisfaction is always only temporary. — schopenhauer1
Thus, we can adjust certain expectations, goals, and thought-processes to try to achieve an equanimity in a mental health issue, or anxiety about an aspect of life, but this does not necessarily get rid of the underlying, metaphysical lack that is baked into the human experience (or existence itself pace Schopenhauer). — schopenhauer1
That is fine. Rational is kind of bandied about in too many ways to be fully useful a word, but in this case you seem to mean a sort of psychological state where a person's decisions do not get overcome by anxious thoughts, depressing thoughts, etc. — schopenhauer1
If someone has what they consider a dysfunction and believes certain strategies to work in order to "break" a cycle of emotionally distressing thoughts, then that is what therapists try to do (if they do it well). However, no matter how "well-adjusted" someone is, they can still hold a metaphysical view that the world or that human nature has a state of dissatisfaction, that something is always lacking (whether that be in surviving, entertaining, or maintenance related goals). — schopenhauer1
I don't think so. A metaphysical view and psychological techniques to cope with various perceived (or real) mental distress can be considered two different and mutually exclusive realms. One can make psychological techniques perhaps into some metaphysical view, but that is not a necessity. — schopenhauer1
I'm still not sure what this means. — StreetlightX
By dealing with the initial central equivocation first, and by then constructing an honest self narrative on that basis. — Marcus de Brun
Identity must precede the narrative; if the narrative is to have any meaning outside the 'endless loop' scenario. — Marcus de Brun
Snap into it. — Marcus de Brun
Can you set out your reasoning? — StreetlightX
At the outset of this exploration into your depression, and depression in general you equivocated upon a question that strikes at the heart of human self identity. — Marcus de Brun
That is not the point of pessimism. The point is the suffering of the lack that is always in the equation — schopenhauer1
Good is not seen as the carrot and the stick. Rather, the process itself, is considered either absurd or based on a basis of a foundational lack. — schopenhauer1
CBT is not a philosophy. — schopenhauer1
They are techniques for a patient who has mental functions that are not processing at a level deemed efficient by that same patient. It doesn't provide a grand vision of life. — schopenhauer1
And I have experienced bad trips, absolutely hellish trips, in fact; although for me in my first phase (!7-20 years old) of experimentation each trip usually started out like that and then came good (very good!) later. — Janus
I do, and I object. — Bitter Crank
Where is your complaint department located? — Bitter Crank
Psychedelic experiences... It all depends on so many factors. The rule of thumb is to be in a healthy state of mind before going into one. — Blue Lux
This is a good environment, positive outlook, etc... — Blue Lux
The psychedelic takes you on an adventure. — Blue Lux
Fighting it is what causes 'bad trips.' — Blue Lux
Personally the most revealing psychedelics are LSD, DMT and mushrooms (excluding amanita muscaria). — Blue Lux
The squeaking wheel gets the grease. — Bitter Crank
I don't count experiences engendered by psychotropics as "psychotic" — Janus
That's all, and you already know this, right? — tim wood
For so long as you do not confuse (the) business with what the business does. — tim wood
The intraworldly approach might say it leads to antinatalism- don’t reproduce more suffering and that it leads to some basic metaphysical understanding which, if you are one to be inclined to like having that understanding, might be said to be “good” to have.
The holistic approach would find it an invalid question. The problem with question is that it implicitly asserts good to a) exist as an output and b) put production as some measuring stick. A problem in the first place is that we must produce. The idea of producing something itself is part of the problem, so why would philosophical pessimism be worried about it? It’s structurally suffering, so an intraworldly solution like X output doesn’t even make sense. — schopenhauer1
I have experimented extensively with hallucinogens including LSD, Mescaline, Psilocybin, DMT and Sylvia divinorum, and I have had the most bizarre experiences, but never one about which nothing all could be said. — Janus
The complaining comes first- the active change comes next. The second part is definitely the hardest. It's like someone who always thinks they have a great idea but can never quite manifest it in an actual business. — schopenhauer1
I bring up a lot of the negative aspects of the human experience, and the structural suffering of life. I guess this can be construed as complaining. But then, I am bringing up disapproval of a negative state of affairs. In this case, it is the negative state of affairs of life itself. It is perhaps to catalyze people to look at it for what is going on to us as a whole. — schopenhauer1
A complaint is an expression of disapproval or disappointment regarding a state of affairs and may or may not be directed at an agent. A criticism is an expression of disapproval and/or an identification of a fault/deficit specifically directed at an agent, or a system designed and controlled by agents, or the creative work of an agent. That's the basic distinction I'd make. — Baden
Well, I only made the claim that one implied the other in the case of a complaint regarding an agent. But, examples aside, what is the specific semantic distinction you want to highlight? — Baden
Complaining implies criticism when the complaint concerns an agent (rather than, for example, venting about the weather). — Baden
It could be, but the example I gave concerned an official complaint regarding sexual harassment. Are we agreed that that case is also a case of complaining? — Baden
I'm not sure. Are you saying you think I'm confusing "complaining" with "criticism". — Baden
I would say if it results in or at least aims at a positive outcome and is undertaken for good reason. So, a positive or justified complaint to me would be one the motivation for which is a wrong, and the goal of which is to right that wrong. A negative complaint is one that involves simply venting with regard to a wrong (perceived or otherwise). For example, complaining to the appropriate authorities about being sexually harassed at work would generally fall in the former category while venting on the internet about how shit your life is in the latter. — Baden
Evidently quite a bit, considering the frequency with which it is done. you should read - if you can get your hands on it, Aaron Schuster's Critique of Complaining (in his Deleuze and Psychoanalysis). — StreetlightX
It means that there's nothing inherently wrong in complaining. It's the context in which we do it that counts. — Baden
If we didn't care we wouldn't complain. These things are complimentary, not disjunctive. The apathetic on the other hand - those who don't even care enough to complain - they are the true uncaring. — StreetlightX
What matters with regard to maturity is whether the complaint is justified/necessary as well as how it's presented, not that it's a complaint per se. — Baden
