I realized that when things go too well for me and I'm too happy for too long that I self sabotage in order to bring my life back down to a comfortable level of ... meh.

@Tfmonkey Schopenhauer pointed out that all of life is suffering. You struggle and strive to get what you want. If you don't get it, you're miserable. If you do get it, you eventually get bored, so you make up a new goal to go on struggling for. In any case you're fucked.

@philosophy That's why I prefer Camus to Schopenhauer. You push that rock up that hill, knowing it will roll back down and nothing will be accomplished, and you enjoy it.

@Tfmonkey I think existentialism, and Nietzche, is just trying to paint lipstick on a pig. Schopenhauer doesn't pull punches. He calls it a pig.

The Pali Buddha is the same: all consciousness is suffering. All of it. But! There's a way out.

@philosophy Ultimately, there is no one true "philosophy" that is good for everyone. Philosophy is the "art of living", but different philosophies might benefit different people.

In the end, you haven't killed yourself, so you're living for something, and whatever that thing is appears to be worth the suffering of existence, so just make the most out of it.

@Tfmonkey I might agree that there's no use getting attached to a philosophy or making it part of one's identity or ego...if that's what you mean.

But at the same time, I think Schopenhauer's entire point is that it's not worth it. You can only delude yourself into thinking there's something that's worth it. He didn't think suicide made a difference either though, as the Will to Life lives on anyways.

I think philosophy goes beyond living too. It can be a search for Truth.

@philosophy truth isn't objective, and whether something is "worth it" is also subjective. That's a value question, and we know from economics and common sense that value is wholly subjective.

It's cool that you like Schopenhauer and don't think it's "worth it" and that any value anyone finds is a delusion. That's YOUR subjective value.

@Tfmonkey Opinions aren't objective, but saying that truth isn't objective is a category error. The entire point of the concept is that it is what it is despite your feelings for it. I agree that a concept like "worth it" is subjective, but not truth.

Saying there is no truth is a self-contradiction. So is saying truth is not objective (because you've just made an objective claim about truth).

@philosophy This is the core issue. There is no such thing as objective truth. Truth is a characteristic of proposition which can be true or false, but philosophical "truth" cannot exist because values cannot be true or false because the only way to judge anything is through consequentialism, which relies entirely on values and preferences.

Also saying "there is no objective truth" is a preposition that is true, but truth is not an object itself.

Watch this video please
youtube.com/watch?v=_jLJczkOU4

@Tfmonkey Ok, I watched and I see where we’re talking past each other.

You’re calling out reifying truth. Reification is a fallacy where one conceives an abstract concept as a concrete object. There’s no concrete object of “truth," "justice,” or “goodness." I totally agree with you on this point.

My contention could restate “There is no truth” to “The set of true propositions is empty,” which is clearly a contradiction. The set of true propositions is non-empty.

@philosophy Yes, the set of true propositions are non-empty" but the propositions themselves are rooted in pragmatic self-interest, thus subjective values and preferences.

and thus the there is no "true" correct way to discover, there is only your way, my way, etc.

@Tfmonkey You're in very interesting territory. You're basically expressing Schopenhauer's view. Kant's genius was in recognizing a set of propositions that must be assumed true...or else you literally can't make sense of the world at all. Schop came along and said that our minds are arranged this way in order to fulfill the Will to Life...to survive in modern terms.

This is a profound thing. Even the deepest truths, like 1+1=2, are the result of the Will making sense of the world.

@Tfmonkey But even if we couldn't make sense of the world, would be still not be conscious? Like, wouldn't we still experience sights, sounds, etc...we just couldn't make sense of them. It seems like consciousness is an objective truth no matter what in this sense.

@philosophy consciousness is such a loaded word with so many loaded meanings that I try to avoid it.

A plant is aware of the sun and reacts to it's light, growing towards it, and receiving it's light and absorbing its radiation to live.

Is the plant conscious of the sun? Definitionally, no. However, the plant clearly responds to the sun in a way that furthers its self interest (survival) within it's (very) limited ability to perceive and respond.

We are all likewise limited by our perception.

@Tfmonkey By consciousness, I mean, "That which has an experience." You feel a pain in your leg...you have the experience of pain.

What I'm contending is that saying something like, "We're all limited by our perception" still makes an assumption that we're all perceivers having perception. Making sense of perception is contentious, but the fact we're perceiving something is not.

Will respond more later, returning to work.

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@philosophy Yes, there is a perceiver of perception, a thinker of thoughts, an observer of observations.

That is "the self".

What is it's nature? What it is "made of"? Is it the universe looking out through infinite eyes? Is it an immortal soul separate from the mind and body? Is is the dreamer experiencing the dream of existence?

I don't know.

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Merovingian Club

A club for red-pilled exiles.