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01-29-2002, 06:38 PM | #31 | |
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Sometimes a question is asked that you cannot answer. I'd likely say, after a LONG pause, "I'm sorry, but I tried my best to make life worthwhile for you. My failure as a father must weigh heavily upon you. |
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01-29-2002, 06:42 PM | #32 | |
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We're conditioned to. As survival machines for our genes, this is hardly surprising And genes are selfish after all . I dont think we can overcome instincts in such a short time frame. Given thousands and thousands of years maybe ... in a few hundred years - no way ! - Sivakami. |
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01-29-2002, 07:07 PM | #33 | |||
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1)It did not seem likely when I made the decision that they would hold that opinion. 2)I am not sure they actually hold that opinion. 3)They may not hold that opinion in the future. [ January 30, 2002: Message edited by: tronvillain ]</p> |
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01-30-2002, 01:25 PM | #34 | ||
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01-30-2002, 02:33 PM | #35 | ||||||||
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I suppose the reason you are looking for is for the child's sake, rather than humanity.
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I find your attitude soothing, refreshing. I like a woman who can appreciate being cynical and realistic, when things suck for her. I like someone I can bitch at, who wouldn't act like I am "mistaken" or think they can talk me out of it with lies. What ever happened to self-pity, people? It makes for a nice passionate knot in the belly that helps digest the food. Quote:
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I think you are being much too optimistic. Punish yourself with exercise or read some Nietzsche or something. Sit someplace with bad posture for a while. Eat spicy foods before bed, so you will have nightmares. That will teach you. Quote:
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How would you know you were not depressed compared to others without feeling what they feel? Your arguments do seem as much to conclude that you would want to kill yourself. Quote:
Maybe Prozac, or St John's Wart could make you happy. Maybe the only solution to providing happiness is genetic engineering. Are you claiming to have a rational reason to be unhappy? |
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01-31-2002, 02:28 PM | #36 | ||
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How do we know that we are not acting by instinct in excercising our ability to think and rationalize the world? A desire for truth - or rather, better understanding, seems to have been pretty motivational in most societies and manifested in the context of religious and scientific endeavours. Our faculties of reason and logic give us the ability to rationalize the world but do not appear to give us the reasons as to why we should employ them in doing so - which is interesting! To quote Einstein: Quote:
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02-02-2002, 04:44 AM | #37 | |||||
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You seem to think happiness would be caused by knowing one will go to heaven. That is only true if one's anticipation of such a thing brings them pleasure. It may bring them a longing they really suffer from, but think is pleasure. Heaven offers the same sorts of pleasure the world offers, just more of it. I could give other examples, but my point is that discovering what causes a pleasure is sort of a science or trial-and-error. It is unknown whether there be an intrinsically pleasurable "thing", that makes (or should make) every rational person happy/pleased. Pleasure is rather a subjective experience we feel for unknown reasons. There is no reason why the "reasons" you seem to say you feel bad about, would/should necessarily make a person feel bad. Maybe it is something else making you feel that way, or something else, which causes the "reasons" make you feel bad. If the "reasons" don’t make you feel bad, then they don't seem to be valid reasons, because they are claiming they would/should make every rational person feel bad. Quote:
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[ February 02, 2002: Message edited by: hedonologist ]</p> |
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02-02-2002, 05:10 PM | #38 | ||||||
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Man's sense of the divine is an instinct which is argued to have no rational basis. So why should our instinct to reproduce have one? Quote:
You seem to be suggesting that if happiness is 'just' chemistry then 'reason' must be a combination of chemistry plus 'something else'. What is that something else to which you seem to be eluding? Quote:
Couldn't we simply say that pleasure is subjective and idiosyncratic? Secondly, must the cause be based around 'reason', couldn't it simply be based around 'instinct' - or something else? Quote:
I think we would still struggle to argue that the 'thing' is pleasureable in and of itself. It would seem more accurate to say that (should such a 'thing' exist) that the subjective responses of individuals to this objective event are known to be similar. Quote:
I am also interested by the term 'unknown reasons'. This almost suggests that 'reasons' are entities which exist independently to the human mind and which the human mind has yet to discover and of course represent a statement of faith. They represent a hope for the 'not yet seen' or not yet perceived. It also suggests that there must be a reason (even if undiscovered) for every human action. We can seek to rationalize human behaviour but wouldn't it be fallacious to suggest that all human behaviour is based upon reason? The moment a rationale is created for an action, if that rationale is then argued to be the only legitimate base for that action (which was formerly carried out not on the basis of this reason) couldn't it be argued that rationalists are guilty of plagiarism? Quote:
[ February 02, 2002: Message edited by: E_muse ]</p> |
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02-02-2002, 11:09 PM | #39 | ||||||||
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02-03-2002, 03:22 AM | #40 | |||||||||||
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Greetings Hedonologist, thank you for your reply.
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From your comment I would make the inference that 'reason' must be something more than a simple chemical process I would also have to ask whether any chemical process going on inside a person can be described as simple. As all thoughts, ideas and experiences relate to the chemical processing of the brain, how can reason be something more than chemical? Quote:
2. subjective = dependent upon the existence of a mind. Pleasure is something experienced by an individual and as with all experience must fall into category two and be purely subjective. It seems common sense to me. Put a brick in a fire and it will not suffer. Put a person in a fire and they will. What is the difference. The brain! Quote:
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What is reason then? Both pleasurable feelings and the ability to reason exist within human beings. If one is 'simply chemical', what is the other? Quote:
What I am saying is that the 'reason' for certain human behaviours might not themselves be based upon 'reason'. We must look beyond reason when seeking to explain human experience. Quote:
I would suggest that secularism has the ideal that all human behaviour must be based upon our ability to reason. Jess himself said: Quote:
Sivakami posted: Quote:
However, if certain commendable behaviours have been born out of something other than pure reason (religious instinct for example), then to make pure reason the only legitimate basis for this behaviour seems a form of plagiarism to me. Pure reason hasn't been the basis for certain behaviours in the past and so why should it be made the basis for them in the future. The same is true with regard to having children. Reason obviously hasn't dictated our ability to do this in the past, so why should we insist that it must now? Quote:
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