T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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824.1 | A choice I'd rather not make. | CSOA1::KRESS | Oh to be young and insane! | Wed Aug 23 1989 20:29 | 18 |
|
David -
Great question - where did you find this? First of all, I do not
have children so I cannot say that I know what it is like to be
a parent. However, I will take the bait....Please remember: this
is *my* choice.
I think it would be noble of me to choose that my child have a short,
bitter, painful life so that all of mankind may benefit from the
contribution my child has made. However, to make such a choice
for someone other than myself - I could not do it. Ok! I'm selfish.
I would want my child to live and be happy. To see my child go
through pain, suffering, scourn, rejection and know that I chose
it to be so - well, I honestly don't think I could do it.
Kris
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824.2 | It is easy! | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | | Wed Aug 23 1989 21:48 | 1 |
| Without question the first...and without explanation!
|
824.3 | Door #1. | JETSAM::WILBUR | | Wed Aug 23 1989 22:01 | 5 |
|
Number 1. Number 2 would be selfish (ei This way I can make a great
contribution.)
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824.5 | X = Y ? | BTOVT::BOATENG_K | Sins of Omission or Commission | Thu Aug 24 1989 00:41 | 10 |
|
Re:0
Errrr, can I ask just a question .?
Is the base note an abstraction/extraction of the Messiah/Shiloh
concept ?
It could make a difference in subsequent replies, I believe.
|
824.6 | blinded by interest | RICARD::LAWSON | | Thu Aug 24 1989 08:17 | 33 |
|
Re. .5
> Is the base note an abstraction/extraction of the Messiah/Shiloh
> concept.
No.
Not everyone chooses happiness for the life of their hypothetical
child, but most people do.
This hypothetical game is revealing of very little. But I think that what it
does reveal by the majority of happiness choices made, is the extent to
which we implicitly believe in the values of an illusion. What seems to
motivate us is the pursuit of happiness.
As .1 indicated, even if people sense some moral disapprobation
of their choice of happiness, they very understandably defend it on
the grounds that whatever their hypothetical child's potential achievement,
they could not wish upon him or her the kind of unhappiness the archangel
promises.
I am not suggesting that there is anything fundamentally wrong with
the idea of happiness, but to hold happiness as the ideal of life seems
to involve a number of difficulties and paradoxes, not the least of which
seems to be the the extreme infrequency with which it seems to be achieved.
Why is it so hard for us to be able to imagine any other point to life
than the personal satisfaction of the individuals living it ?
David.
|
824.7 | | REFINE::STEFANI | Imagine me and you... | Thu Aug 24 1989 09:01 | 9 |
| re: .0
If I choose Option 1 and my child eventually gets married and raises a
family, he/she WILL have made a memorable contribution to the future of
the species. It's very difficult to wish pain and misery on your
own flesh and blood. It would be more appropriate to ask yourself the
question of which would you choose for yourself.
- Larry
|
824.8 | A Culture of Care | RICARD::LAWSON | | Thu Aug 24 1989 10:10 | 9 |
|
Re. .1
This question and an examination of the "pursuit of happiness" is
discussed in length in David Smail's book, "Taking Care, An Alternative
To Therapy" ( ISBN 0-460-02450-7 ).
David.
|
824.9 | Life/Human - Culture/Nature | RICARD::NIS | The goblin is by the water. | Thu Aug 24 1989 12:12 | 34 |
| I admit I hate to 'have to' answer the question in .0 directly for
"the usual reasons", however ...and a deep sigh later...
I do have some moral objections against choosing happiness without
hesitation:
Am I to be satisfied that my offspring is safe (chosen), while a
large portion of the planet continues to suffer?
It tends to scare me a lot when things appear to go easy.
(Let's not get into who send the archangel!)
Caring (love) is good, when sincere; surely it would seem: if many more
people cared just a little more (especially those who seems the most
the strive for power) the world could become a better place.
But 'care' is that also a way to turn things outside of oneself:
never mind my frustrations, I've got to help my brother he's in deep!
What I believe to have observed is that 'happiness' is a very varying
goal. What we decide in one 'moment' to be a meassure (necessity) may
change to something complete different (possibly even contradicting)
in the 'next moment'. In setting our h-goals we are 'inspired' by our
environment (in our society we are constantly imposed values), which is
completely beyond our control in the way it affects us; so do we really
"decide"?
One paradox against happiness that springs to mind: in the periodes
of my life, that I remember experiencing as "happy", I did tend to
'grow' more careless with time - in fact less satisfied, borred?
So, if any of you out there has some guts next time AH shows up, ask
for a commitment that, that misserable life be spend finding the
ultimate formula for computations of answers to questions like that.
;-) Nis
|
824.10 | Passing the buck. | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Thu Aug 24 1989 13:52 | 8 |
| Yes, I think it is more appropriate to ask what people would want for
themselves rather than their kids? In either case, my answer is
probably: "Thou will be done", and if the guy upstairs insists on me
making a decision, I will pray: "Thou will be done", and toss a coin.
Christ or Malcom Forbes?
Eugene
|
824.11 | Not all that clear... | VINO::EKLUND | Dave Eklund | Thu Aug 24 1989 15:44 | 17 |
| Fascinating question. I am reminded of the old "ends justifying
the means" problem. People do make similar choices all the time.
Consider those who have sacrificed their own lives willingly for a
variety of causes. The main difference here is that we are being
asked to sacrifice the happiness, etc. of someone ELSE for some
unspecified end which benefits the species.
What if the benefit were the actual survival of the human race?
Would that affect your answer? I suspect so... Fortunately the
question as expressed is fairly theoretical (I hope!), but it does
bring to mind the fact that life really is full of interesting choices.
And finally, without further information, I vote for door number 1,
choosing for an offspring what I would probably choose for myself.
Dave E
|
824.12 | | APEHUB::RON | | Thu Aug 24 1989 16:17 | 30 |
|
As often happens, when an answer is difficult to arrive at, it makes
sense to examine the question.
Choice #1: .. your child will grow to a great age, loved and
respected by all, having done no wrong or mean thing to
anybody, successful, rich, healthy, and above all happy ...
... but will have made no memorable contribution to the
future of the species beyond the immediate good works of a
lifetime.
Choice #2: ... your child will have a short, bitter life, full of
spiritual pain and bodily ill-health, will be universally
misunderstood and rejected ...
... but will prove to be of fundamental, beneficial
significance to the culture for centuries to come.
Do you see anything wrong? Can a short-lived, frustrated, bitter,
pained, unhealthy, misunderstood and rejected person make such a
major contribution? Can he make *any** meaningful contribution?
My perception is: no. Therefore, choice #2 is not an option.
Choice #1 isn't that realistic, either, but --in the not so
ultimate sense-- is at least possible. That makes it the only
choice.
-- Ron
|
824.13 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | the universe is not magic | Thu Aug 24 1989 17:35 | 13 |
| I would also pick happiness for my own child.
I wouldn't wish choice #2 for anybody. They'd probably get no thanks
for it anyway. If the only way the human race can improve is for
somebody to have a short, miserable, unhappy life, we may as well
forget it.
BTW, I do think the pursuit of happiness is the meaning of life,
as long as we don't deliberately hurt others in the process. What
else are we here for if not to try to enjoy ourselves.
Lorna
|
824.14 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Thu Aug 24 1989 17:41 | 10 |
|
If one could live a life that leads to love and respect from
many, and go to ones death knowing one has harmed no other,
that is a successful life. And a life that has contributed
to mankind.
Deborah
|
824.15 | without reading responses: not MY choice to make | SELL3::JOHNSTON | weaving my dreams | Thu Aug 24 1989 18:13 | 10 |
| I would decline to make that choice. The child I carried would not be
_mine_, but a person who should be free to choose its own path through
life.
I would _want_, above all, for my child to be happy. But it is not for
me to choose the way of another's life.
[and now I will go back and read what others have said...]
Ann
|
824.16 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Thu Aug 24 1989 18:56 | 13 |
| >Do you see anything wrong? Can a short-lived, frustrated, bitter,
>pained, unhealthy, misunderstood and rejected person make such a
>major contribution? Can he make *any** meaningful contribution?
Unfortunately, examples abound: Beethoven (a bitter, lonely, deaf
heavily in debt musician died in his fifties), Emily Dickinson
(Insane poet died in obscurity), and finally, Galois (Mathematician,
founder of group theory. His ground breaking thesis was rejected by
the mathematicians of the time, and didn't receive the proper recognition
till years after his death. Died at 21 in a duel for a girl who didn't
really care about him).
Eugene
|
824.18 | | RICARD::LAWSON | | Fri Aug 25 1989 09:55 | 15 |
|
In fact, the archangel's offer forces a false choice. There is no necessary
connection between ill-health, rejection, etc., and creativity; no necessary
connection between virtue and misery. It is probably this which causes some
sense of irritation to those who respond to the question.
However, I believe that what 'is' revealed by the responses is the extent to
which happiness is seen to be an enormous motivator of human conduct. What
seems to keep us going from day to day is the pursuit of happiness. It is
clearly preferable that people should be happy rather than unhappy, but to
base the purpose of life on it does seem to pose a number of problems.
I repeat my earlier question: why is it so hard for us to be able to imagine
any other point to life than the personal satisfaction of the individuals
living it ?
|
824.19 | integrity | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Aug 25 1989 09:55 | 17 |
| Neither option deals with what I would really want for my
offspring -- that they grow up with enough honesty to know what
they believe in and enough courage and integrity to stand up for
those beliefs no matter what the consequences. That if they were
to find themselves in a future equivalent of Nazi Germany, for
example, they would stand up against the oppression, or if they're
government officials working for HUD, they'd blow the whistle
rather than take large payoffs from huge development corporations.
Standing by your beliefs can cause you to be unhappy and
misunderstood and all the others. I suspect it's a little less
likely to make you happy and universally respected, but it's not
impossible. In either case you might or might not make a
difference to future humanity. The two don't seem to be directly
connected.
--bonnie
|
824.21 | | APEHUB::RON | | Fri Aug 25 1989 11:39 | 17 |
|
> Unfortunately, examples [of miserable humans making enormous
> contributionas to mankind] abound: Beethoven ... Emily
> Dickinson ... Galois ...
Yes, there must be exceptions. But Beethoven is a poor example. He
became embittered towards the end of his life, as he felt his work
was not appreciated and his deafness isolated him more and more. But
he did not die young. The fifties, I suspect, was the median life
span at the era.
Dickinson also did not die young and certainly was sane when she
wrote the bulk of her poetry. I know nothing of Galois - did he
really fit the description in .0?
-- Ron
|
824.22 | No footprints when we go | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Fri Aug 25 1989 12:11 | 30 |
| All things are transient including human memory. Whether or not
a person makes a memorable contribution to the human race is not
a factor in validating that person's existence since the person,
the memory and the contribution will, in time, pass like rain.
Since we have limitted time in this one and only life we get to live,
and for all eternity we shall ever again experience this thing called
life, to expend this spark, consciously and with forthought, in an
existence marked by suffering and misery makes about as much sense as
drowning yourself to build a sandcastle.
Heinrich Boltzman made significant contributions to the world of
physics yet committed suicide because his work was never accepted as
being valid. How many people know of him or of his work? How many
people care?
Vincent Van Gogh spent his entire life in misery and poverty. His
contribution to the art world is significant. Two of his paintings
sold recently for a combined price of almost $100 million. His
contribution to modern art is beyond measure. Yet I can't help but
feel that Vincent himself would have preferred to have a decent meal, a
nice home, freedom from his madness, and quiet contentment while he was
alive.
It goes on.
"Glory, like all things, is fleeting." is not a statement about glory.
It is a statement about all things.
Kris
|
824.23 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri Aug 25 1989 14:34 | 15 |
| re .21,
I don't think they are exceptions. As a matter of fact, many great
artists, musicians, novelists are miserable human-beings. Well, many of
them live to an old age, but "die young" doesn't equate "miserable
life". Among the miserable immortals, we have T. S. Eliot, Emily
Dickinson, Sylvia Plath, Beethoven, Mozart, Mahler, and as -1 pointed out,
van Gogh.... As a Chinese, I might as well add Confusious to the
list.
The strange thing is that many type 1 fellas aren't really happy
either (How many time Liz Taylor got divorced?). King Solomon wasn't
particularly happy, and by the way, is Elvis still alive?
Eugene
|
824.24 | | STAR::RDAVIS | Something ventured, nothing gained | Fri Aug 25 1989 15:18 | 46 |
| RE: .22 - -< No footprints when we go >-
Martyrs of art and science have been mentioned; we could easily come up
with lists from politics and religion as well. And what about the most
common of martyrs - those who sacrifice material or emotional comfort
for what they see as the good of their family?
I believe that it _is_ possible to choose "drowning yourself to build a
sandcastle" and that it _is_ possible for a human being to choose a
path knowing full well that it isn't the most comfortable one
available. It is natural to hope that it will eventually become the
most comfortable one, but hope is not the same as "going with the
odds". It is also natural to hope that the object of the sacrifice is
somehow of permanent value, but again...
Otherwise, I would have to take the view that those who have made
sacrifices lack free will and are victims of their compulsions. (Some
Freudians do seem to think that art is something to be cured of, but I
hope that there isn't universal agreement on that.)
RE: .22 & .23 -
It's worth mentioning that "ordinary people" and hedonists can also be
miserable human beings. You can't protect yourself against unhappiness
with the magic formula "Nothing matters and what if it did?". Perhaps
that makes the martyrs seem slightly less irrational?
RE: .0 -
For me, the most unrealistic aspect of the question is not the choice,
but having to make the choice for someone else. This always muddies
the waters:
When I lived in NYC, it seemed that as soon as they had a child, NYers
born-and-bred would get hot for the suburbs.
- "But you grew up in the city, and you turned out great!"
- "Yeah, but I don't want my kid to go through what I did."
- "But you had fun!"
- "Yeah, but it was tough sometimes."
So when the kids grow up, they'll live in the city because they have
such lousy memories of the sticks... (: >,)
Ray
|
824.25 | The point of living - more relevance to the public sphere | RICARD::LAWSON | | Fri Aug 25 1989 19:22 | 42 |
|
Re. .13
> I do think the pursuit of hapiness is the meaning of life....
> what else are we here for if not to enjoy ourselves.
I do not think that happiness of any kind can be the point of life.
The expectation that there must be a discernable point to life is the
first step to a life-denying individualism in which the future of the
species becomes sacrificed to personal immortality. People suffer bitterly,
go crazy and even kill themselves because they are unhappy. It's easy to
see why. To be unhappy in our society means to have lost the point of
living.
David Smail (author of question) discusses our dilemma...
"One is reminded of battery chickens, whose only difference from us lies,
presumably in their lack of consciousness. Since it knows no other, the
battery chicken ( if only it could talk to itself ) would no doubt believe
that it existed in the best of all possible worlds, and would see the point
of its existence as being fed regularly and nourishingly, kept in comfortable
- if overcrowded - circumstces of even light and heat, and medicated to
keep it free of disease and maintain its proper rate of growth. What the
chicken would not see, of course, is that there is indeed an altogether
darker and less bland purpose behind its pampered life of easy passivity,
and even on the day of its sudden and terrifying end it would not realise
what its life had been for.
Our case is not so different, for our lives also have a purpose beyond
that ( the pursuit of happiness ) which we can immediately see, and though
it is one to which, if we are lucky, our private life is not sacrificied,
it is certainly one which claims our public lives."
I believe that what is hinted at in .0 is that we have all bought the
idea that the point of life is to be happy and have become collapsed in
on a life of private contemplation of how we feel.
There is no reason to believe that, for there to be a point to life, we
should know what it is. It may take thousands of centuries before we've
even learned how to live decently together without worrying about what the
point might be. I think that the most we can hope to do is make what
contribution we can in the brief time we have available.
|
824.26 | | RICARD::LAWSON | | Fri Aug 25 1989 19:56 | 12 |
|
Re. .20
> It is difficult for me to see how 'WE' can do anything at all.
I think we have bought the belief that if we cannot change the world, then
it is not worth trying. However, trying is something to be done, whether or
not we see any observable success. Not only is it impossible to tell whether
our efforts have any effect, but we must be prepared that they may have no
measurable effect at all.
David.
|
824.27 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri Aug 25 1989 19:57 | 20 |
| re -1:
Personally, I must say that I agree with Sigmund Freud who said that
the moment a man questions the meaning of his life, he is insane (or
something to that effect).
I remember taking a humanity course (required for my degrees) that
spent a third of the time discussing the meaning of life (frankly, I
was quite bored by it) and were asked to write an essay about it.
Well, as a mathematician, I was quite use to abstract stuff, so after
an abstract hocus-pocus "proof", I basically said: "Don't Worry, Be
Happy!". Guess what? I got an A for it! Since then my respect for the
philosophers just went down hill :-) :-). I read Freud's quote in
that class, so it was not a total waste :-) :-).
Seriously, I think my essay was quite good. Hmmmm, should I present
it here?
Eugene
|
824.28 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri Aug 25 1989 20:00 | 4 |
| .27 was refering to .25 not .26.
Eugene
|
824.29 | my opinion... | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | the universe is not magic | Mon Aug 28 1989 13:08 | 22 |
| Re .25, I do not think that there is any reason to believe that
there is any point to life. Just because we do not understand what
the "grand scheme" is, does not mean that it exists.
I think it's wonderful for people to help others during their
lifetimes. But, since none of us know what the true overall reason
for life is - why does the universe exist, is there God, etc. -
then I think it is up to each of us to find our own individual reason
to exist. Mine is to enjoy my time on earth as much as possible
without deliberately hurting anybody else. It is true that some
people commit suicide because of unhappiness, but I think it is
not the goal of happiness that is to blame but instead that the
individual in question chose the wrong way to attain happiness.
Happiness does not have to be attained only by money and material
possessions. Happiness can also be found in the beauties of nature,
in art, music, literature, in friends, and in family, and in romantic
love. If a person in good health, who has all of the above still
cannot find happiness, it is not the ideal of happiness that is
to blame, but the shallowness of the person in question.
Lorna
|
824.30 | | STAR::RDAVIS | Something ventured, nothing gained | Mon Aug 28 1989 13:50 | 32 |
| Re .29 -
As an explication of _your_ approach to life, this is great stuff. I
even agree with most of it. But do we have to bash prophets,
philosophers, revolutionaries, and anyone else with a nagging feeling
of "something missing" by blaming "the shallowness of the person in
question"? Epicureanism gets a lot of bad press so a little backlash
is understandable, but "shallowness" can be a hard charge to prove.
There is also the question of how someone who lives for happiness gets
by when they do not have "all of the above", or even many of the above.
Re .27, "the meaning of life (frankly, I was quite bored by it)...
Since then my respect for the philosophers just went down hill :-)
:-)." -
No offense to you - just to your prof (: >,) - but it might not have
been entirely the fault of the philosphers that it seemed like so much
hot air. I've had math classes that were worthless puffery and phil
classes that weren't.
It's hard to find good philosophy courses in most colleges anyway, and
an everything + kitchen-sink humanities course is probably going to be
the equivalent of a "Physics for Poets" overview - you won't get much
sense of the discipline.
Of course, you might not get a kick out of philosophy no matter how
it's presented. I never understood the fuss about chemistry, myself.
(: >,)
Ray
|
824.31 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Mon Aug 28 1989 16:55 | 19 |
| re .29
> Mine is to enjoy my time on earth as much as possible
> without deliberately hurting anybody else.
I will drink to that.
> If a person in good health, who has all of the above still
> cannot find happiness, it is not the ideal of happiness that is
> to blame, but the shallowness of the person in question.
Uh, personally, I think it is a matter of "taste great" or "less filling".
re .30
And that's all there is to philosophy.
Eugene
|
824.32 | But what is "filling"? What is "taste"? | STAR::RDAVIS | Something ventured, nothing gained | Mon Aug 28 1989 22:08 | 12 |
| Re .31 -
Yass, yass, I was just wishing that some of the H_R noters coulda made
it to our discussion group in the Fenway bleachers Saturday afternoon,
where we settled just this topic... The answer was "None of the
above".
(Actually, I really like the idea of Jacques Derrida in a Miller Lite
commercial. "Mi and mon ami Beau Jacquesong av many differences. But
oui canne agris on ouonne dzing..." Anyone got his agent's number?)
Ray (and I'll drink to anything) (: >,)
|
824.33 | life, the universe and everything | YODA::BARANSKI | Looking for the green flash | Mon Aug 28 1989 23:34 | 32 |
| RE: .0
I'd tell the archangel to ask my child. Else I'd decline for them the glory and
misery. If asked for myself, I'd take the glory and regret it later. :-)
In practice I try to strike a balance to keep from being bored. :-)
In the case where their happiness depends on other people's misery... I'd
seriously question whether that dependance is really there, and who is really
responsible for the misery. True happiness cannot depend on another's misery,
and "do no ill" as promised in .0.
RE: .12
I certainly think that it's possible for a miserable person to make a great
contribution. *many* if not most of the great people in history have had more
then their share of misery.
RE: .18
Actually I tend to believe that there *is* a cause and effect connection between
misery and greatness. Those who are comfortable have little reason for change.
Now as to whether happiness can be a goal which can be work toward in life...
I doubt it. As other's have said, there is more to life then happiness.
I do hope that there is some point to life... optherwise it will make things...
well... pointless. To not know (or to at least think you know) the point would
make me very unhappy, and pointless. To say that it is impossible to know the
point would be very despairing. As long as there is a goal in sight, and a path
from here to there I guess people should be happy.
Jim.
|
824.34 | Ann, I love you... | HARDY::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Wed Aug 30 1989 18:38 | 14 |
|
Ann,
Why is you always say what I am going to say before I get to say it?
Me too...I have no right to make choices for anyone...much less
a child...for whom my responsibility is to prepare him or
her to make his ir her own.
Silly question...[no offense intended...]...we, none of us, have any
right to go around making decisions for others...so th point *should*
me moot.
Melinda
|
824.35 | Wishes are okay | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | | Thu Aug 31 1989 09:00 | 4 |
| It is only natural to have wishes for our loved ones...that are often
based on our experience.
J
|