(July 21, 2017 at 12:36 pm)agamordant Wrote:(July 20, 2017 at 11:05 pm)Astonished Wrote: Anyone think this would be worth it to undo everything our war criminals and political crooks and religious charlatans have done? Or a step too far?In my view the problem is always that you're allowing someone (or something) else to decide what is harmful or beneficial, which is always a relative and contextual judgment anyway. Also, the calculus of tradeoffs is very personal. For example I'm a type 2 diabetic, but I choose not to eat as strictly as I "should" because I'd rather live for a shorter time and maybe have some enjoyment during that time, than to live longer but with less to look forward to and enjoy. If my feet suddenly went numb or my retinas started to detach or something, that might provide me with a different set of tradeoffs to consider, but that is for me to decide.
I understand the feeling that the world is saturated with stupidity and idiocy, a fact that for me at least has been clarified since the 2016 US election cycle combined with Brexit and other nationalist hysterics going on or trying to gain purchase all over the world, and undo decades of human progress in the name of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
As a theist, back in the 70s and 80s, I had a very pessimistic view of human nature because of the doctrine of utter depravity and the obvious fact that most people didn't accept the remedy I thought was appropriate (repentance and commitment to Christ). Also because the church taught that I was a member of the "tattered remnant" of the Faithful and I tended to wear this a badge of honor while I tsk-tsk'd about the world going to hell in a handbasket when it was all so unnecessary.
After I transitioned to atheism I developed the notion that most people, left to themselves, misguided though they at times are, mean well and try their best to do well.
After the US looked the gift horse of Bernie in the mouth and then elected his near-polar opposite, I am tempted to return to my pessimistic stance (which is natural for my personality, anyway), just for different reasons. I'm not sure how that's going to sort out yet but I'm not going to cut off my nose to spite my face by giving up my personal freedom to some allegedly benevolent and caring authority, even if (and maybe especially if) it's not human.
(July 21, 2017 at 12:29 pm)*Deidre* Wrote: Well, partially true. My thoughts were a little incomplete. I learned along the way of my ''journey'' since abandoning Christianity the first time, and explored Buddhism, that suffering is actually not inevitable. Pain is inevitable, life and its obstacles, sometimes brings pain. But, to suffer, is optional, and it's in that clinging to pain and wallowing in it, that we create suffering. It took me a while to get that, but finally I did. My grandmother's death is painful for me, but if I choose to think my life sucks because of it, is up to me. So suffering while it might seem out of our hands, is in very much in them.I don't presume to know how you think nor was that statement an effort to insult you. I had the same failure to see what's possible for most of my life. It's not because I was stupid or unaware but because I just didn't know anything else but pain and the teaching that it's just inevitable. I do think that the fairly common notion that suffering is necessary for various reasons, generally represents an acceptance of suffering as a "given" such that we dare not imagine a better world or spend too much energy making that world a reality.
I don't have a failure of imagination. Don't presume to know how I think, because you don't.
Semantically yes I agree with you, pain is inevitable and suffering is (kind of) a choice in the sense that you pointed out -- that we can impotently rail against our pain and thus transmute it into something worse than it is, so we shouldn't so that as it's pointless. In that sense suffering is self-created and can be let go of. I can even accept that transcending attachments, etc., represents one form of personal growth, even while believing that growth can be had in a number of other and ultimately more effective ways.
But suffering in the sense I'm talking about it is the existence of the copious amounts of grief, loss, deprivation, want, poverty, war, tribal and ideological conflicts, disease / mental illness, bigotry, cruelty, indifference, neglect and so on. These things objectively exist no matter how well or poorly we respond to them. And I don't consider any of these things desirable, even in the indirect sort of way that it provides growth opportunities. I've experienced a lot of pain and lost a lot in life, and I can't say it has made me a better man, only that I've done my best to not let it take me down, and have in some measure succeeded.
All I'm urging you to consider is not to consider these things a permanent fixture of the human condition. Just one example, up until someone stumbled on ether as an anesthetic, for all of human history people just bit rags when they had to have a surgeon cut them open or do an amputation or whatever. No one had the framing to even understand that it was possible to spare people that sort of agony. In fact, when the field of anesthesia first was invented, more than a few people, including doctors, saw it as interfering with the will of god, as depriving people of the privilege of developing a stiff upper lip. We now would consider such a view to be, by turns, ghastly and cruel.
My vision is that we will eventually look back on the present day in the same way: how could we have had such notions and tolerated such atrocities? One by one, we're eliminating sources of human suffering (which, BTW, is something devout Buddhists seek to do also, and I'm sure you're among them). I think the corollary to that is that we should never be accepting of the suffering that remains.
The open question of course, to the point of the OP, is, are we creating new forms of suffering faster than we're eliminating them as a species, because we just can't help ourselves? And would it be worth it to have some third party take care of us?
Hmm...perhaps a different set of circumstances to contemplate might be a better way to answer that question. In the face of an annihilation event such as that which would befall us if invaded by the grey goo from The Day the Earth Stood Still (the new one with Keanu Reeves) if we as a species didn't 'shape up', and we could appeal to a more powerful and advanced third party to forcefully remove that which would stupidly and/or stubbornly refuse and thus doom us all, I think I'd find it hard to argue against telling them to fling the Tea Party into the sun.
Religions were invented to impress and dupe illiterate, superstitious stone-age peasants. So in this modern, enlightened age of information, what's your excuse? Or are you saying with all your advantages, you were still tricked as easily as those early humans?
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There is no better way to convey the least amount of information in the greatest amount of words than to try explaining your religious views.
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There is no better way to convey the least amount of information in the greatest amount of words than to try explaining your religious views.