marjoram_blues wrote:It it is unfortunate that my response seems to have been interpreted as my simply accepting feelings as they arise; giving little further tbought fo their quality, implications or management.
"Seems to" being the key phrase. My intent was that you are just observing without judgement.
That's so much of the web today - clarifying comments rendered ambiguous by the need to not incur tl:dr. Then, if we go into detail, we have to re-explain the things missed by people first coming to grips with novel complex ideas and not ready for that detail. So it goes. Optimistic or pessimistic, much of life involves graft.
marjoram_blues wrote:For me, it is important for feelings/emotions to be examined and dealt with appropriately, depending on their strength and duration. Which philosophy of life one adopts may help or hinder this process. It is interesting to speculate and perhaps organise world views in terms of top 10 wellbeingness success. Not sure I would believe the outcomes...
The top ten is a funny concept :) I suspect that, with all the shared information online, the conclusions people come to are becoming more homogeneous and streamlining into major tranches of thought.
marjoram_blues wrote:I think that the concepts of optimism and pessimism can be usefully analysed. Are they simply feelings of happiness; a core type personality, both. More ? Extreme ends of a spectrum, where most of us lie in the middle, if we even think about it but would likely want to be seen at the positive, good end.
I don't see that it is beneficial to see others in black and white terms. For example, if you have a certain philosophy ( like Dalek's ) you are pessimistic, if you disagree then you are pollyannish.
I agree. Ideally most of us would have views somewhere in the middle but the homogenisation of human ideas through common exposure is bringing us to more black and white conclusions, especially with the ever-more-ubiquitous news media manipulating public opinion for profit and political influence. Humans still have a survival-based negativity bias, and this is creating a feedback loop of negativity.
There is growing misanthropy and enormous anger at the destruction of ecosystems, especially as it is occurring without material benefit to the general public due to the growing disparities equality. Still, with the benefit of hindsight, today's problems were predictable enough for the ancients' to devise the four horsemen of the apocalypse meme. Even the people of the Iron Age couldn't help noticing that over time populations grow, things get crowded and ever more competitive, and projecting on from there to non-sustainability is a matter of simple logic. Part of the skewing of the modern mind comes from media propaganda - denials of basic physics and logic by those of influence with vested interests. Society appears to be splitting and it seems likely from here that that drones are being created as part of an evolving world order.
However, while events in our own lifespan are obviously most important to us, due to the creative and destructive cycles of nature, the destruction of society as we know it is probably neither good or bad to a larger, planetary or universal perspective. I am increasingly seeing the Earth like an egg. In nature, creatures lay numerous eggs but there is often a high attrition rate. If life of Earth falls away before reaching its potential life elsewhere will surely "crack the code" and master/transcend their biology enough to persist.
marjoram_blues wrote:I understand everything you speak about. I am not a complete newcomer to the approaches you describe so well.
I would expect that on a philosophy forum and that's why I am here! You can actually converse substantially with people who don't give you blank gazes or a "shut up you nerd" vibe, or change the subject. Yesterday I was chatting with a couple as we walked our respective dogs and the subject of flightiness in dogs came up. One mention by me of "amygdala" earned me a blank look and a quick exit, leaving me yet again feeling like Robinson Crusoe awash in a sea of anti-intellectualism. So I come to philosophy forums ... as do you rest of you :). Any smart person has reason to focus on the negative. Still, with age I increasingly see it is a skewed perspective that only takes half of the equation into account. If the aim is to better understand reality, then neutrality helps. If the aim is to be happy, then optimism helps. If the aim is not to be disappointed and be ready for upcoming threats, pessimism is the tool. There have been studies suggesting that pessimists tend to be more realistic and live longer, although if one is a miserable, pessimistic sod it begs to question as to why a longer life would be of benefit :)
marjoram_blues wrote:It's clear that you have researched well. Is there a single philosophy which fits well with you. Or is it a case of daily processing...
I confess to the use of performance enhancing drugs like any good information junkie and dedicated psychonaut :)
I like parts of various philosophies (obviously superficial hedonism is a favourite) but not all of any particular philosophy. I bought a philosophy overview book with summaries of each philosopher's ideas and I could barely read it because it read like a stream of misapprehensions, blind alleys, ephemera, linguistic games and occasionally utter tosh - and with far less of substance than I expected (no doubt editing played a part, to be fair).
I was left with the impression that the most clear modern thinkers, with the benefit of their predecessors and advances in science, have embraced ever more realistic and substantial paradigms. In that sense, philosophy seems like science, with its own progression of provisionally accepted and rejected memes.
Damn, done it again. Next post will be short!