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Re: Pessimists - What Keeps You Going?
The love of family. Much more secondarily, relationships, romantic and friendly. Then film and literature, paintings and what have you.
Like some other folks on here, I have to admit to a sort of comfort that came for me when I traded in armchair optimism and belief/identity for the more abrasive arrangement of reality that really just seems to be the truth. I'm getting away from the larger discussions about god and existence for a moment, and simply talking about these minor processions of anxiety and loss that constitute most lives, big or small, celebrity or pauper, writer or bricklayer. I get, from the best of art, from Aickman particularly, but from a handful of other artists as well, the impression that the best you can do is to understand that you are blindfolded in a maze with no entrance or exit. Or, as Becker put it so eloquently: “Take stock of those around you and you will … hear them talk in precise terms about themselves and their surroundings, which would seem to point to them having ideas on the matter. But start to analyse those ideas and you will find that they hardly reflect in any way the reality to which they appear to refer, and if you go deeper you will discover that there is not even an attempt to adjust the ideas to this reality. Quite the contrary: through these notions the individual is trying to cut off any personal vision of reality, of his own very life. For life is at the start a chaos in which one is lost. The individual suspects this, but he is frightened at finding himself face to face with this terrible reality, and tries to cover it over with a curtain of fantasy, where everything is clear. It does not worry him that his “ideas” are not true, he uses them as trenches for the defense of his existence, as scarecrows to frighten away reality." |
Re: Pessimists - What Keeps You Going?
I have felt very suicidal today. Can't get through to my doctor until Tuesday and am home alone for a few weeks.
I keep going at these times purely due to instinct. I certainly have no conscious desire to be here a second longer. |
Re: Pessimists - What Keeps You Going?
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"It would be unnecessary suffering. You would be demonstrating that the knowledge hadn't informed your choice of actions rationally." By the very same token, though, i could claim that the quote above demonstrates that you have not properly understood what rationality entails; yet that does not mean i have proved my claim, nor have you, yours. But let's not focus so much on the example of suffering , the relevance of which example to our subject is dubious anyway, and return to my original assertion, which is that i might very well be wrong about despairing at the apparent meaninglessness of existence, given that my subjectivity may prevent me from taking into account the full ramifications of a universe and an existence which do, by their very nature, extend beyond my person, experience and the limited reach of human reason. |
Re: Pessimists - What Keeps You Going?
Then again, if I am proved wrong in my pessimism, well...I rest my case.Joseph K just left the Castle.
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Re: Pessimists - What Keeps You Going?
"That doesn't follow from what i said. Are you denying that there's a distinction between informed and uninformed actions?"
Oh, it follows. You propose that knowledge can 'rationally inform' something, & thus has reason, as if it were a sentient being. But, to answer your question: I am not denying or affirming that there's such a distinction as you mention; what i affirm is that however informed an action might be, it might still, because of the limits of human comprehension, fall short of a full understanding of all considerations pertaining to that action, its consequences and reasons, in regards to the non-human aspects of that equation (which aspects are significant, seeing that there simply is more Cosmos than there is Man). What i deny is that an action that is uninformed by or divergent from your personal description of 'truth', 'reality' or 'reason' must perforce be an irrational act. Further: "You've argued against all means of determining what is true, yet you say "very well be", which suggests a probability. Through what means are you trying to determine the probability of your being wrong?" All that i have argued against is the reasoning you employ to try and prove that reality, truth and reason conform themselves to your description of them; and i am not trying to determine the probability of my being wrong, i am merely suggesting that neither of us need to rest uneasy should we turn out to be wrong about anything; it is, after all, only human. |
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If we evaluate situations entirely in terms of conscious experience, eliminating external referents of our thinking, then ethics could be about the one thing you wish it to be about, suffering. You don't even have to argue that concerns external to our minds should have no ethical weight except as they affect experience; you can just rule them out of bounds of your conception of ethics. This is motivated by a wish to leave pain-centered ethics with no rivals, I suspect, but even if my suspicion is untrue, I would like to bring up situations for which your ethics would be useless. If an unconscious person is sexually molested by a psychopath who does not evaluate his actions as harmful, and the unconscious person has no physical injury or evidence or memory of it later, did anything unethical occur? I think by your ethics you would have to answer no. No harm was consciously experienced by anyone. With technologies that are near fruition or already here, acts that most would now consider horrible could occur on a large scale without being judged unethical by your criteria. Conscious experience could be manipulated by electrical stimulation of the brain and by virtual reality technology. People could be completely controlled while having no awareness that they are being controlled (rendering lack of choice unharmful in your terms), and they could feel nothing but delight the whole time. All of this could be administered, and even originally set up, by computers. Is this unethical? Brain-in-a-vat redescription of the experience of sentient beings in the world may seem useful to a pain-centered ethics, but such a redescription renders humans helpless in confronting near-future technologies. If ethics only applies to matters of conscious experience, then what objection could there be to seeing ethics and rationality themselves as simply matters of conscious experience, experience that can be manipulated? If redescribing ethics and rationality in this way is an inaccurate description of judgment and thought, who cares? If no one cares in his conscious experience that ethics and rationality have been reduced to seeming, it doesn't matter. I don't think you intend to subjectivize ethics and rationality, but you have left yourself no ethical ground to object if ethics and rationality are manipulated into subjective seeming, or even if the very ideas of ethics and rationality are lost entirely, as long as no one feels harm. Quote:
The difference between, say, Plotinus, Eckhart, et al. and a schizophrenic, or someone with temporal-lobe epilepsy, involves more than better social functioning. They are also much better at reflecting on and describing their experiences and rationalizing and articulating their ideas in their writings. What I am agnostic about is not specific theistic claims (which I don't believe) but the question of whether mystical experience and related speculation can ever reveal anything about reality. I doubt it, and it plays no part in my own thinking, but I don't think it is entirely a closed question. Quote:
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Ethics could not possibly be a comprehensible concept if no one was capable of having qualitative experiences. You've argued against ethics being rational. The view that ethics should be about whatever people think it should be about subjectivizes ethics. My view is a moral realist view in opposition to that. I think nonexistence would be at the highest peaks of Sam Harris' moral landscape concept, and I doubt he would agree with that, but otherwise I mostly agree with his arguments for moral realism. Quote:
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Re: Pessimists - What Keeps You Going?
This dead horse is bruised enough.
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