Spockrates
Wonderer.
As for your first statement about suffering, it's all just a matter of our logic brain which is used for survival and problem solving as I've said before. The logic area of our brain without our feelings of pleasure just allows us to live and make decisions/solve problems anyway because I think it was just evolved ("programmed") that way. It would be no different than how a virus or a cell can still live even though it has no feelings/emotions of pleasure or suffering. But here again, our thinking without our feelings of pleasure is not a genuine reason to live and it does not make our lives good and worth living at all without our feelings of pleasure and we are only fooling ourselves into thinking our lives can be good and worth living to us anyway without our feelings of pleasure.
So people who find reason to live without their feelings of pleasure are living like nothing more than a conscious version of a virus or a cell. It is only the higher elite class evolved human beings who can easily see past this "trick" that our logical minds are playing on us into making us think that our lives are still good and worth living without our feelings of pleasure. People who still think they can live a life of good value and worth to them without their feelings of pleasure, these are the lower class and less evolved human beings. They are less evolved like that of a living virus or a cell as I've said before. Only the higher class human beings can see the true motive (incentive) of our very lives that makes our lives good and worth living which would be our feelings of pleasure.
But did you answer the question? I asked why you did your homework or studied for a test. Please tell me: Why did you?
As for your 2nd statement, that idea could very well be pleasurable and would make that a good idea to the bodybuilder if he derived feelings of pleasure from that idea. But again, it's just his feelings of pleasure here in the moment that would define his life as being good and worth living and not the greater amount of pleasure he would get later on in life. This is because our conscious can only be here in the moment as I've said before. He might have the better life later on. But he is only here in the moment which means that only his feelings of pleasure here in the moment define his life as being good and worth living right now.
But did you answer the question? I did not ask if the IDEA was pleasurable. I asked if the RESULT was pleasurable. Having a good physique is pleasurable to him. Isn't it?
As for your 3rd statement, our logical reasons are never genuine reasons. Only our feelings of pleasure make our lives genuinely good and worth living.
If logical reasons are never genuine, sincere and real, then why are you giving me logical reasons now? But if you are saying logical reasons are not genuinely emotional but are genuinely logical, then I concur.
As for your 4th statement, fear is a response to run away. Therefore, this soldier's act to fight was forced (faked) and not genuine. She was having the flight response. Therefore, if she has chosen to run away, then that would be a genuine act. Only her having the fight (anger) response would make her act of fighting genuine.
Go back and read my new argument that I made earlier since it explains more on this. Actually, since feelings of compassion might motivate us to fight, then perhaps her act was something genuine. But if she felt no emotions or felt nothing but depression, then that said act would not be genuinely expressed. Feelings of depression (hopelessness) demotivate us while feeling neither pleasure nor suffering neither motivates us or demotivates us.
Yes, I see. A genuine act of fear might be running away. Thanks for making me think.
Staying and fighting, it seems to me is more like an act of bravery. But what a paradox that is! If the soldier feels fear, but acts bravely then she is called brave. But would you say she is not genuinely brave? Do you think the truth is that sometimes our actions contradict our emotions? or maybe there is a stronger emotion that overrules a weaker one--the emotion called desire? Most soldiers desire to be brave. Do you think desire might often be the stronger feeling in motivating us to act?
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