PHIL 3160 – Philosophy of Happiness

What is it, how can we best pursue it, why should we? Supporting the study of these and related questions at Middle Tennessee State University and beyond. "Examining the concept of human happiness and its application in everyday living as discussed since antiquity by philosophers, psychologists, writers, spiritual leaders, and contributors to pop culture."

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Questions Nov 4

 K ch1; WJ, The Dilemma of Determinism

1. Calvinism set out, for Henry James Sr., what impossible task?

2. Kaag thinks the Civil War gave WJ his first intimation that what?

3. WJ's entire life had been premised on what expectation?

4. What did WJ say (in 1906, to H.G. Wells) about "SUCCESS"?

5. What Stoic hope did young WJ share with his friend Tom Ward?

6. What thought seeded "the dilemma of determinism" for WJ?

7. As WJ explicated determinism in 1884, the future has no what?

8. WJ found what in Huxley's evolutionary materialism alarming?

9. Determinism has antipathy to the idea of what?

10. To the "sick soul," what seems blind and shallow?



Wm James Hall 

Map of William James's Cambridge... 

  • Do you feel more resentful or grateful to have been "thrown" into the world? 11
  • Do you agree with Jennifer Michael Hecht? “None of us can truly know what we mean to other people, and none of us can know what our future self will experience. History and philosophy ask us to remember these mysteries, to look around at friends, family, humanity, at the surprises life brings — the endless possibilities that living offers — and to persevere. There is love and insight to live for, bright moments to cherish, and even the possibility of happiness, and the chance of helping someone else through his or her own troubles. Know that people, through history and today, understand how much courage it takes to stay. Bear witness to the night side of being human and the bravery it entails, and wait for the sun. If we meditate on the record of human wisdom we may find there reason enough to persist and find our way back to happiness. The first step is to consider the arguments and evidence and choose to stay. After that, anything may happen. First, choose to stay.” Stay: A History of Suicide and the Arguments Against It by Jennifer Michael Hecht

  • Does Calvinism "set out an impossible task"? 13
  • Do you agree with WJ's father about "the point of life"? 
  • Can there be a constructive, non-violent "moral equivalent of war"? 21
  • Do you agree with James about "our national disease"? 22
  • Would it be bad if all your wishes "were fulfilled as soon as they arose"? 23
  • Was "Mark" right about the three parts of a person? 26
  • If there's no "soul" is determinism true? 28
  • If humans are animals, do we have no soul? 31
  • Were Nietzsche and Buber right about suicide? 34-5
  • Are you one of the lucky "once-born"? Does that make you "blind and shallow"? 40
  • If we possess free will, would it be wrong to insist on a coercive demonstration that we do? DD 566
  • Do you believe you regularly experience opportunities to really choose between alternative futures? Could you decide, for instance, to take an alternate route home from school today? 573
  • Are some regrets appropriate and unavoidable? 577
  • Does determinism define our universe as one in which it is impossible to close the gap between how things are and how they ought to be? 578
  • Which is better, pessimism or subjectivism? 584f.
  • Does life lose zest and excitement, if things were foredoomed and settled long ago? 594

 

Sick Souls, Healthy Minds: How William James Can Save Your Life

by John Kaag (author of American Philosophy: A Love Story and Hiking with Nietzsche)


In 1895, William James, the father of American philosophy, delivered a lecture entitled "Is Life Worth Living?" It was no theoretical question for James, who had contemplated suicide during an existential crisis as a young man a quarter century earlier. Indeed, as John Kaag writes, "James's entire philosophy, from beginning to end, was geared to save a life, his life"--and that's why it just might be able to save yours, too. Sick Souls, Healthy Minds is a compelling introduction to James's life and thought that shows why the founder of pragmatism and empirical psychology--and an inspiration for Alcoholics Anonymous--can still speak so directly and profoundly to anyone struggling to make a life worth living.

Kaag tells how James's experiences as one of what he called the "sick-souled," those who think that life might be meaningless, drove him to articulate an ideal of "healthy-mindedness"--an attitude toward life that is open, active, and hopeful, but also realistic about its risks. In fact, all of James's pragmatism, resting on the idea that truth should be judged by its practical consequences for our lives, is a response to, and possible antidote for, crises of meaning that threaten to undo many of us at one time or another. Along the way, Kaag also movingly describes how his own life has been endlessly enriched by James.

Eloquent, inspiring, and filled with insight, Sick Souls, Healthy Minds may be the smartest and most important self-help book you'll ever read. g'r

==

THE DILEMMA OF DETERMINISM
By William James

A common opinion prevails that the juice has ages ago been pressed out of the free-will controversy, and that no new champion can do more than warm up stale arguments which everyone has heard. This is a radical mistake. I know of no subject less worn out, or in which inventive genius has a better chance of breaking open new ground--not, perhaps, of forcing a conclusion or of coercing assent, but of deepening our sense of what the issue between the two parties really is, of what the ideas of fate and of free will imply. At our very side almost, in the past few years, we have seen falling in rapid succession from the press works that present the alternative in entirely novel lights. Not to speak of the English disciples of Hegel, such as Green and Bradley; not to speak of Hinton and Hodgson, nor of Hazard here --we see in the writings of Renouvier, Fouillée, and Delbœuf how completely changed and refreshed is the form of all the old disputes. I cannot pretend to vie in originality with any of the masters I have named, and my ambition limits itself to just one little point. If I can make two of the necessarily implied corollaries of determinism clearer to you than they have been made before, I shall have made it possible for you to decide for or against that doctrine with a better understanding of what you are about. And if you prefer not to decide at all, but to remain doubters, you will at least see more plainly what the subject of your hesitation is. I thus disclaim openly on the threshold all pretension to prove to you that the freedom of the will is true. The most I hope is to induce some of you to follow my own example in assuming it true, and acting as if it were true. If it be true, it seems to me that this is involved in the strict logic of the case. Its truth ought not to be forced willy-nilly down our indifferent throats. It ought to be freely espoused by men who can equally well turn their backs upon it. In other words, our first act of freedom, if we are free, ought in all inward propriety to be to affirm that we are free. This should exclude, it seems to me, from the freewill side of the question all hope of a coercive demonstrations,-- a demonstration which I, for one, am perfectly contented to go without.

With thus much understood at the outset, we can advance. But not without one more point understood as well. The arguments I am about to urge all proceed on two suppositions: first, when we make theories about the world and discuss them with one another, we do so in order to attain a conception of things which shall give us subjective satisfaction; and, second, if there be two conceptions, and the one seems to us, on the whole, more rational than the other, we are entitled to suppose that the more rational one is the truer of the two. I hope that you are all willing to make these suppositions with me; for I am afraid that if there be any of you here who are not, they will find little edification in the rest of what I have to say. I cannot stop to argue the point; but I myself believe that all the magnificent achievements of mathematical and physical science--our doctrines of evolution, of uniformity of law, and the rest--proceed from our indomitable desire to cast the world into a more rational shape in our minds than the shape into which it is thrown there by the crude order of our experience. The world has shown itself, to a great extent, plastic to this demand of ours for rationality. How much farther it will show itself plastic no one can say. Our only means of finding out is to try; and I, for one, feel as free to try conceptions of moral as of mechanical or of logical rationality. If a certain formula for expressing the nature of the world violates my moral demand, I shall feel as free to throw it overboard, or at least to doubt it, as if it disappointed my demand for uniformity of sequence, for example; the one demand being, so far as I can see, quite as subjective and emotional as the other is. The principle of causality, for example--what is it but a postulate, an empty name covering simply a demand that the sequence of events shall some day manifest a deeper kind of belonging of one thing with another than the mere arbitrary juxtaposition which now phenomenally appears? It is as much an altar to an unknown god as the one that Saint Paul found at Athens. All our scientific and philosophic ideals are altars to unknown gods. Uniformity is as much so as is free will. If this be admitted, we can debate on even terms. But if anyone pretends that while freedom and variety are, in the first instance, subjective demands, necessity and uniformity are something altogether different, I do not see how we can debate at all... 

...determinism leads us to call our judgments of regret wrong, because they are pessimistic in implying that what is impossible yet ought to be. But how then about the judgments of regret themselves? If they are wrong, other judgments, judgments of approval presumably, ought to be in their place. But as they are necessitated, nothing else can be in their place; and the universe is just what it was before,--namely, a place in which what ought to be appears impossible. We have got one foot out of the pessimistic bog, but the other one sinks all the deeper. We have rescued our actions from the bonds of evil, but our judgments are now held fast. When murders and treacheries cease to be sins, regrets are theoretic absurdities and errors. The theoretic and the active life thus play a kind of see-saw with each other on the ground of evil. The rise of either sends the other down. Murder and treachery cannot be good without regret being bad: regret cannot be good without treachery and murder being bad. Both, however, are supposed to have been foredoomed; so something must be fatally unreasonable, absurd, and wrong in the world. It must be a place of which either sin or error forms a necessary part. From this dilemma there seems at first sight no escape. Are we then so soon to fall back into the pessimism from which we thought we had emerged? And is there no possible way by which we may, with good intellectual consciences, call the cruelties and treacheries, the reluctances and the regrets, all good together?

...

The dilemma of this determinism is one whose left horn is pessimism and whose right horn is subjectivism. In other words, if determinism is to escape pessimism, it must leave off looking at the goods and ills of life in a simple objective way, and regard them as materials, indifferent in themselves, for the production of consciousness, scientific and ethical, in us... (continues)

https://www.uky.edu/~eushe2/Pajares/JamesDilemmaOfDeterminism.html 

12 comments:

  1. The young William James is sickly and depressed with a tendency to "over-think" everything and ruminate about his condition. He strikes me as a very spoiled child desperately trying to find something meaningful to do with his life in which he is free to do nothing at all if he chooses. When, at the advent of the Civil War, it dawns on him that there are many things in life beyond his control and perhaps even inevitable and fated, he is shaken to the core like a child who has for the first time in their life been told "NO". It appears to me that James sought to live in his head to avoid the excruciating pain he felt otherwise. In a sense, he talked (reasoned) himself out of suicide.

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    1. He was definitely an indulged child, if also frequently disrupted by his father's restless and constant travels and family up-rootings and relocations. I'm not sure I'd say "spoiled," though, that conveys to me the thought of a self-absorbed egoist who lacks concern for others. Reading his youthful correspondence reveals instead the heart of a humanist and humanitarian early on, well before he "just about touched bottom" etc. But the unequivocal "NO" of events beyond his control must indeed have been a shock to his young system. I'd say he rallied pretty effectively, eventually.

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  2. 5. What Stoic hope did young WJ share with his friend Tom Ward?
    He told Ward to “know that you serve some purpose” and that by knowing this he can have a pleasing life “no matter what his lot in life.” Kaag goes on to summarize saying even if “everything…(is) stripped from a person” they can still hope to have a “free response to the horrible situation into which he or she has been thrown. That was the Stoic hope…” (Kaag, p. 27)

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  3. When James told friend Tom Ward to "know that you serve some purpose" and that he could have a good life and freely respond to his situation "no matter what his lot in life", I have to wonder if he wasn't also talking to himself.

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  4. In my experience, there are many alienated sick souls in the world who tend to project their inner struggles and delusions on everyone and everything around them. If their sickness is identified accurately their response is to accuse others of being sick in the same way. They seem to resent clear thinking "healthy-minded" people most of all and see them and blind, shallow, and even stupid. In fact they like to give others such pet names as a way to put them down thinking somehow that this lifts themselves higher in the eyes of those who agree with their assessment.

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  5. Does life lose zest and excitement, if things were foredoomed and settled long ago?

    I would definitely say so. What’s the point of caring if nothing I do changes the outcome? Well, I suppose I’m just destined to care, then? Really, this whole debate becomes muddied with these types of infinite back-and-forths.

    Now, I don’t think a radical determinism necessarily removes all excitement (Well, unless if it’s destined to). My point is that one can think of it as a book. The ending of the book doesn’t change as you read it. No, it remains the same at every twist and turn of the plot. However, the reader remains engaged and on the edge of their seat the entire time. So, could a predestined life not be just as excitable?

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    1. Interesting analogy. When reading a story whose ending we don't want to "spoil" we pretend, page by page, that the outcome is still really unresolved and that what happens in the subsequent unfolding of the tale will "determine" what ultiamtely happens. Don't we? We pretend, in other words, that the story has not already been entirely writ. We try to block out any awareness of an AUTHOR, whose existence would imply a PLOT and a PLAN (or SCHEME) which the characters in the story have no power to influence. We want those characters' actions to contribute to the determination of events. That's what makes a story compelling to us. James would say that's what makes life compelling too.

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  6. This looks like a useful link: https://iep.utm.edu/james-o/

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    1. And: https://www.uky.edu/~eushe2/Pajares/james.html

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  7. I really enjoyed reading is "life worth living" for last class (I decided to post this here cause I figured this would be more active), and something James said in me struck me as particularly interesting. It was along the lines of its dogmatic folly 5o believe that our needs can offer no insight into the universe which seems a direct response to Attense's point he made in class the other day about how something's pragmatic value has no effect on its truth value which reminds of things I've found interesting im Alvin Plantinga's epistemology because I think in different ways they're both correct. It seems to me that what we need can tell us about the world around (as a scientific example our need to eat helped earlier scientists understand the role of energy in chemical reactions in the body), but they don't necessarily do so which I think is why so many of us dogmatically assume that they can't be trusted at all which seems to me to be throwing the baby out with the bath water. If we operate as I believe most of us do as some form of empiricists especially those who claim some rigorous empiricism like James than we should defer first to understanding the world through our own experience of which our needs are a crucial part and then only reject them when we have greater experiences 5hat we might consider to contradict or outweigh the need by cohering to a greater amount of our total sum of experience and knowledge.

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  8. Do you feel more resentful or grateful to have been "thrown" into the world?

    I would say most days I feel grateful to have been thrown into the world. I have days where I am most definitely nowhere near as grateful as I should be honestly. I think being able to manage that mindset and holding yourself accountable to being grateful is one of the most important steps to preserving your happiness.

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Steve Gleason’s good life

What's the last great book you read? When I was diagnosed [with ALS], one of the first questions I asked in a journal entry was, "...