Suffering Makes Life Meaningful ?

So, you are willing to live in a world that contains no satisfaction?

The release from suffering and the experience of satisfaction of course.
I remember someone somewhere saying " I don't have to taste the donut to know it's sweet". Why do think that satisfaction requires suffering? That we would not recognize the good without the bad? That's load of hogwash. I can go to a movie or read a book or listen to a song and be completely satified without having to experiance a bad movie, book, or song before hand. Besides good and bad is relative to the experiancer. I may completely love a song or movie and be made happy and joyfull by it but someone else would be completely appalled by it. That's why I brought up the masochist angle. Some deviants find "suffering" pleasurable (and I mean "deviants" the best possible way) Others strive on misery, like those with "Munchausens by proxie".

The idea that suffering makes life worthy is an apologetic to explain why an all loving god can allow suffering.

But then "suffering" is really in the eye of the beholder. Suffering in heaven could mean "Drat! they're late with the marachino cherries again!"
 
So, aside from the fear of retribution, what do you base morality on? It sounds to me like you have nothing to add in its place.
Uhh, does ' doing the right thing ', have any meaning to you?


In spite of all the clutter, I suspected your philosophy involved more than just covering your a$$...

I now see my suspicions were unfounded..
 
Davis Swidler:
The God of the OP doesn't take half measures. Only the greatest good will suffice, and that brings with it the risk of the greatest suffering.
Who decided this ?

I'm suggesting an omnipotent God, by definition, wouldn't be constrained in such a way..

It could create a world with less suffering ( I didn't say ' none ' ) but chooses not to..
 
One almost supposes that Iacchus thinks that humans have none of the following evolved, built-in, and learned qualities: compassion, mercy, familial and societal bonds, future hope and sight, and whatever else drives us to sustain 'morals' without 'fear of retribution'.

Definitely brain-washed, he is.
 
One almost supposes that Iacchus thinks that humans have none of the following evolved, built-in, and learned qualities: compassion, mercy, familial and societal bonds, future hope and sight, and whatever else drives us to sustain 'morals' without 'fear of retribution'.

Definitely brain-washed, he is.

:clap:
 
If I claimed before that her fate was good for her, I recoil from that and retract it. You're right, it's demeaning. I thought I tried specifically to avoid trying to justify her fate. To do so now wouldn't be any less distasteful (hey, while I'm at it I'll say the Katrina victims deservd their fate, yeah, those freeloading ingrates. And something about Dover, PA).

My point was not to say that she, personally, benefited from being tortured and killed. I shudder at the thought. My point was that making it impossible for any of us to suffer that fate would violate the aforementioned package of achievement, adversity and freewill that stems from the OP. It's scary, but it's an indispensible part of human existence. The God of the OP doesn't take half measures. Only the greatest good will suffice, and that brings with it the risk of the greatest suffering. Immunity from any suffering would stunt human development.
Which leaves unanswered my original question, "meaningful to who?" It seems to me that the answer is that suffering is meaningful only to those who survive their suffering and I will add only to the extent that they find meaning in that suffering. Again, meaning is at best arbitrary.
 
Oh, great. Thanks, Iacchus, for making this thread jump the shark. Godwin's Law strikes again, just when the discussion was getting good.
Was I comparing you to Adolph Hitler? No. Yet we do know that he (and others like him) were responsible for a lot of suffering in this world.
 
One almost supposes that Iacchus thinks that humans have none of the following evolved, built-in, and learned qualities: compassion, mercy, familial and societal bonds, future hope and sight, and whatever else drives us to sustain 'morals' without 'fear of retribution'.

Definitely brain-washed, he is.
Yes, I don't doubt that these qualities exist. However, why should the Universe even give a crap? Or, would you have us believe that these qualities stem from something else?
 
Uhh, does ' doing the right thing ', have any meaning to you?
Boy, that's a loaded question. I'm surprised that you even dare bring it up.

In spite of all the clutter, I suspected your philosophy involved more than just covering your a$$...

I now see my suspicions were unfounded..
If man were not nothing but evil (I believe it says that somewhere in the scriptures), then we have no place to start, but with the fear of retribution. This, at the very least, is what keeps hell from jumping out of its bounds by the way.
 
Davis Swidler: Who decided this ?

I'm suggesting an omnipotent God, by definition, wouldn't be constrained in such a way..

It could create a world with less suffering ( I didn't say ' none ' ) but chooses not to..
I agree. If this world was all there is, then there would be no point to all the suffering.
 
I agree. If this world was all there is, then there would be no point to all the suffering.

Surely that should read 'If this world IS all there is, then there IS no point to all the suffering.'? Otherwise you're making assumptions.
 
Which leaves unanswered my original question, "meaningful to who?" It seems to me that the answer is that suffering is meaningful only to those who survive their suffering and I will add only to the extent that they find meaning in that suffering. Again, meaning is at best arbitrary.
Can we agree that suffering is more meaningful when it happens to someone else? Particularly if it ends in their demise ?
 
I remember someone somewhere saying " I don't have to taste the donut to know it's sweet". Why do think that satisfaction requires suffering? That we would not recognize the good without the bad? That's load of hogwash.
Ah, but everything vibrates, between a state of greater intensity and a state of lesser intensity. Indeed, would the eye be able to see or, the ear hear, without the fluctuating nature of light and sound? Or, if we ran our hand across something, how would we be able to feel anything, if there was no texture to it?
 
In other words without the "peaks and valleys," there would be no variation and no means to differentiate. Hence nothing to "stimulate."
 
So, aside from the fear of retribution, what do you base morality on?
If this were true then of course there would be no such thing as morality. The word 'bad' would simply mean some action that did not ultimately benefit you. Similarly 'good' would be any action that ultimately benefits you.

In other words 'selfishness' would be an exact synonym to 'morality'.
It sounds to me like you have nothing to add in its place. Or, could it be that it gives you a "special" feeling inside to do "nice" things to people?
Even if that was the case it would be a better motive than the expectation of some eternal reward, or avoiding punishment. Or do you think that a little selfishness is bad but a lot of selfishness is good?

But our basic nature is one of empathy. It is just what humans are like, whether it was given to us by some deity or simply evolved as a survival mechanism. It never gets noticed but on the whole people are pretty decent, not because of fear of retribution but just for its own sake. If this were not the case no amount of policing or penal system would stop society from descending into chaos.
Of course you could say everyone benifits by learning to cooperate, but how does that make it moral, as opposed to just practical? Or, what about in the case of someone like Adolf Hitler, would it have been wrong to cooperate with him?
Well if fear of retribution and expectation of reward were the only bases for morality then it would have been moral to co-operate with him unless there was some more powerful fascist around.

But from my point of view yes, it would have been wrong because it would conflict with our basic nature and because ultimately it would have been an irrational thing to do. If we want the maximum amount of freedom for ourselves that is practical and does not infringe the freedom of others, then it is more rational to work towards giving everybody else the same freedom.
 
Ah, but everything vibrates, between a state of greater intensity and a state of lesser intensity. Indeed, would the eye be able to see or, the ear hear, without the fluctuating nature of light and sound? Or, if we ran our hand across something, how would we be able to feel anything, if there was no texture to it?
In other words without the "peaks and valleys," there would be no variation and no means to differentiate. Hence nothing to "stimulate."

Works great for eyes and ears but not for your lot in life. I have to applaud you Iaachus for a stunningly bad application of analogy. My brain cells are still ringing. There should be an award or recognition of some kind. Perhaps my sarcastic bantering is plenty. :)

How about this. If there was no bad and all good, you would never know that bad exists. All you would know is good. Good would be the status quo you would never know it could be worse. But that is all relative. Humans have an uncanny ability to find suffering in the most favorable of situations. We can always find something to complain about.

Also in order to "stimulate", as you put it, all you would need is just differentiation and not necessarily suffering. Think about this: Think about you favorite food. Now think about only having that food for the rest of your life. you'd start suffering pretty quickly. Now lets say you punctuate your feeding cycle with long periods of starvation. Definitely that food would have more meaning to you because of the suffering (even though it the same thing over and over again). Now lets say instead that in between being able to have your favorite food, your fed in cycles where your givin other food (food you like but not as much as your favorite) but for long periods before you get your favorite again. Your not suffering but your favorite is still important and meaninful. I still get misty-eyed and giggly whenever get a chance to eat sushi. I can't afford to eat it all the time, but niether would I want to.
Now, what does this all mean to point of the original post? Probably nothing other than I "really" like sushi.
 
How about this. If there was no bad and all good, you would never know that bad exists. All you would know is good. Good would be the status quo you would never know it could be worse. But that is all relative. Humans have an uncanny ability to find suffering in the most favorable of situations. We can always find something to complain about.
You would have nothing to motivate you. Because energy has both its positive and negative potentials.
 
Can we agree that suffering is more meaningful when it happens to someone else?
No, not necessarily. I had no idea exactly what it meant to have scarlet fever until I had it.

A friend of mine lost a child. I don't truly know what that is like and would not be so presumptuous as to tell my friend that I understand what she is going through. I can only imagine her pain and I know that I have not seen the world through her perspective.

Particularly if it ends in their demise ?
I will concede that the suffering of others and the demise of others can provide meaning to our lives.

Event's provide meaning because it is a human trait to seek meaning in events. The more pronounced the event the greater possibility for meaning. Positive events also provide meaning.

While suffering provides meaning there is no reason to suppose that we need mass murder, pedophilia, rape, violent assault, etc. There have existed societies without such extremes and there existence provided plenty of meaning.
 
While suffering provides meaning there is no reason to suppose that we need mass murder, pedophilia, rape, violent assault, etc. There have existed societies without such extremes and there existence provided plenty of meaning.

We could spend a lifetime debating where the range of possible suffering should end and not come to agreement. In the end it becomes merely a matter of opinion.

But consider the responsibility - and potential greatness - of a humanity that is capable of mass murder, rape, etc. but rises above the temptation. Of people who are moved to act to prevent such things - such as the Danish citizens who donned yellow stars to protest the occupying German discrimination against Jews, then smuggled most of them over into neutral Sweden. Of a society that learns from grave mistakes. The worst events can be transformed into a springboard for goodness. Witness the parents who start foundations to research the disease that affected their children, opening opportunities for countless others to exhibit generosity and empathy - their suffering became a road to human greatness.

To respond to an earlier post:
bruto said:
How does the actual, tanngible manifestation of this plan of god's, with its necessity of essentially indiscriminate or random disaster, and unequal opportunity, differ from the manifestation of a world with no God?
Interesting choice of words. I would qualify the terms "indiscriminate" and "random" with the adverb "apparently," since an omnipotent God is certainly capable of making the specific instances of apparently random suffering circumstantially justifiable, while to the human observer most such events appear random because we don't have all the relevant information. That would also fit the characterization "benevolent".

But back to your question. Obviously if there are differences they'd have to be subtle. I wonder whether the desired state of free will requires the equal likelihood of Yes God vs. No God or whether one of the choices must have greater apparent likelihood. At this point I haven't thought that through (nor am I certain I'm equipped to do so). Off the cuff I'd say the ideal situation would be 50-50, but obviously that's not from thorough analysis. Please share your own musings.

So let's assume the position of the OP POV that such a God exists. As far as humanity is concerned, what distinguishes the world from a godless one?

After giving very brief consideration I've come up with a couple of possibilities, though they are more food for thought than hard positions. I'll have to look into this. Thanks for a fascinating question, bruto.

My first answer would be monotheism. It goes against the prevailing ancient wisdom - and empirical evdience - of disparate forces/gods competing for control of the universe. It's a non sequitur in the ancient world.

Another would be - don't laugh - the Jews. Persecuted and scattered for most of the last two thousand years, with no allies or larger support system such as a central church or allied states (until the twentieth century). Yet not only did they survive, they thrived. I don't know how familiar you are with Mark Twain's own musings on the "secret of the Jews' immortality," which mystified him - despite constituting an immeasurably small fraction of the world's population, Jews have always exercised a disproportionately large impact on world events and trends, and in even greater numbers today than ever before. Try to find a day when Jews or Israel are not mentioned in the world's major newspapers. By itself the story is merely remarkable; the kicker is that the whole shebang was foretold in the OT, hundreds of years before any exile. The dispersion. The persecution. The persistently small numbers (the six million from the Holocaust represented about a third of the total, and two thirds of the European Jewish population). The re-establishment of a Jewish homeland in Israel at the end of days.

I'm sure I can think of more, but that's good material to start with. [Mike Myers as Linds Richman]Discuss.[/Mike Myers as Linda Richman]
 
Iacchus
Two questions for you:
Is there suffering in heaven?
Do people have freewill in heaven?
What is meaning without sensation? What is free will without sensation? Yes, the experience of both heaven and hell are quite sensational.
Again pointing out you see incapable of answering simple questions.


David Swidler
Nobody envies the BTK killer's victim's fate, but don't focus only on her - how does it affect you? Everyone else now should have a greater appreciation for life, an appreciation that would not exist without the potential for it to end abruptly and unpleasantly.
In almost happy land everyone would come together and mourn over the victim then work to making the world a better place. Too bad we don’t live there. The victim was barely a blip on the news shows. Two weeks later who, besides those that knew her personally, even remember her name?

There'd be no drive to accomplish anything because the alternative is also acceptable, so why bother? Humanity,or the poor excuse for it that would exist in such a universe, would never progress past caveman stage.
Or it would free up humanity to pursue higher knowledge without the fear and worry of where the next meal was coming from.
You’re also forgetting basic human characteristics, greed, love, attachment, lust, mercy, etc.

I never called pain a "gift." I called it a logical consequence.
Back it up with something more than ‘I think’.

Actually you do have a choice, with profound implications for your personality. You can choose to believe that no suffering would be better, with the implication that given the choice you would do away with empathy, love, commitment, etc. rather than allow suffering.
Why would no suffering equate to no empathy, love, commitment, etc? Where is the logic in assuming one is connected to the other in any manner besides their being emotions?

But meaningful achievement requires adversity. It requires risk.
No it doesn’t.

Without suffering, there's no such thing as risk. So suffering must exist in such a system.
Without suffering there is risk.

You keep making unsubstantiated statements, provide some evidence for them or we’ll just toss them on the pile where Iacchus resides. You are arguing human ignorance and limiting the omnipotent god as such.

Ossai
 

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