jgnat,
Good morning!
OK, I can go along with your dislike of the word “Ideal”. Let’s replace it with “optimum” then. Does a human strive to reduce his requirements for survival to minimize pain, or does he work at building an optimum life, even if it involves effort and pain? It seems also, that you have confidence that evolved human beings can avoid pain altogether by convincing ourselves it doesn’t really hurt.
Even "optimum" is subjective at best. My "optimum" life no doubt is quite different than yours. Nevertheless, I will agree with you that most all humans have some vague idea of what their optimum life would be like. No doubt it would include loving and being loved as this seems to be hard-wired into our brains. No argument from me.
Can we avoid pain altogether? I doubt it. Physical pain will, of course, hurt and can only be minimally reduced. Emotional pain, on the other hand, can substantially be reduced. Hence we have therapists. I think one of the important factors in reducing psychological disturbance is not being needy or demanding that life cater to us.
You go on to talk about my "minimalist" approach to life:
Do you see how your minimalist approach would lead to a deprived and shortened life?
It could. I'm not saying that anyone should not strive for more than the bare essentials in life though. I think you are getting confused with that point. I'm all for striving for success, love, some approval, etc. But, the difference lies in the fact that you don't need those things to survive or even to have *some* enjoyment in life. (Theoretically speaking I'm not sure that someone who experienced no success, approval or love could experience any enjoyment in life. There probably has never been an adult human who has not to some degree experienced these things)
I haven’t said that, I am pretty sure. I am refuting your statement that love is not a human need. All I have to argue is that love is a human need by broadening the definition of need. I maintain a need is more than the minimum.
Well, now we are just arguing semantics. We define "need" differently. What I call strong desire or want you refer to as need.
Humans need to reach for the optimum because the alternative is a devastating loss of potential, a wasted life.
False dichotomy. You also are setting up the majority of the human race for a "devastating life" since most people will never, ever attain their "optimum" life. My solution is to be content with the bare essentials and strive like hell for the other "nice" things in life like love. If you get them, fine. If not, that's too bad but you can get by without them. You don't need to have an optimum life to be minimally happy.
You said this but didn’t prove it. All you stated is that babies goo instead of talk. Does that necessarily mean that their development is insignificant, or that their needs don’t speak to the hard-wired needs embedded in all of us?
I'm not sure why you drew this conclusion about my view of children at all. Babies are undergoing very important cognitive developments in their first few months and on into the years of childhood. It is simply a fact of science, though, that a baby's brain is very different from a normal, adult brain. To extrapolate baby needs to adult needs seems to me to be rather obviously problematic.
According to your personal view of minimalist requirements as needs that may be true. But I maintain the minimalist approach is wrong. Human needs are broader if our goal is an optimum life. Lack of love shortens human life.
Perhaps. And, I repeat, that I'm not stating to just go for the "minimalist" life.
My instinct is telling me this is a dead end. But I’ll have to think harder as to why. From my own experience, my thinking alone gets me in to trouble. My mind can justify a cruelty or lead me to bad judgement. That marvellously complex brain that can be so useful at time can also deceive itself in to a cognitive dissonance loop.
Perhaps your mind just needs better critical thinking skills and training.
I am much better off when I translate my thinking in to acts of creation. I can then observe the result, confirming whether my approach is effective or not. Observation cures me of my own folly.
All true. I agree. Observation of our behavior is essential.
So again, a mind alone can consider itself perfect, until it has to interact with another mind.
Our minds will never be perfect. We often do better in life when we interact with another mind, but we don't need to do so. In fact, solitude is also very important in life, some people being naturally more prone to being with others and some being more introverted and introspective. Guess which type of person I am.
The resulting conflict if handled well, can result in a meeting of minds. There’s that social interaction and connection again, creating more optimum experience.
From fish to horses is a huge evolutionary leap. Fins are dropped and cud and hoof are built. It’s not nearly as much a leap from horses to gibbons and monkeys. And as I am sure you will agree, it is a tiny jump from primate to human. There’s not a single primate that lives alone as the snail. I’d say it’s a safe bet that we are included in the animal group that requires social interaction to survive.
In the enviornment we evolved in you are probably correct. The enviornment of daily life has changed for humans, though, and our brains and genes have not kept up with the change. This fact is at the root of many human psychological problems, in my opinion.
Rejection is decidedly physical, as it includes the deprivation of touch and eye contact and all kinds of subtle visual cues that tells the victim they are no longer welcome.
Bah. I think you're stretching things. A disapproving stare doesn't literally hurt you. Besides, all these body language cues require interpretation and thinking about the interpretation. I've met many a people that seemed "cold and distant" only later to find out that they really liked me.
:Frankl, well, he said a lot of poetic things
Ad Hominem. Don’t use him to support his argument then turn around and dump him when it doesn’t suit.
A very good point. Touche.
The whole point of Frankl’s lessons in the prison camp is that people rise above minimum requirements.
And they do this through their thinking, as Frankl points out in his book Man's Search for Meaning.
I don’t think you will find happiness, simplicity, or uncomplication logansrun, from trimming your life to the minimum. I suspect rather that we as human beings are our best when we reach for optimum experience. If there’s a relationship worth salvaging, do it.
I totally concur. Now, how will you misinterpret this response to you?
I'd better point something out, though. Really, none of the ideas that I have espoused in this thread are original to me. They're straight out of the system of psychotherapy known as Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy developed by Dr. Albert Ellis. I personally find his philosophy of life the most intellectually honest and emotionally rewarding.
B.