Up@dawn 2.0

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Group One: Happiness, Absurdity, and Suicide

For some reason, I woke up this morning thinking about Camus and The Myth of Sisyphus.  Here's the main thought in the book: "There is but one truly philosophical problem, and that is suicide…all the rest [philosophical and existential questions] comes afterward."

Whether Camus is right or wrong, the question still stands--if only as a matter of degree.  Although I've yet to traverse Russell Stone's Generosity, I understand the philosophical question afoot: would or should we as a society genetically (permanently) tweak our temperament into an eternal state of happiness?  What would this mean?  Two questions immediately came to mind:

1. Would people get bored being in a state of happiness all the time, and, therefore, become miserable?
2. Would eternally happy people from one religion want to kill eternally happy people from a competing religion.

Okay, many more questions came to mind, but here's one more:

3. If everyone were happy, would they take anti-happiness drugs for a change of pace.

I like the ups and downs myself.  I don't see how anyone could write a decent song or create good art if they weren't pissed now and then.

Thoughts?

I guess Paul McCartney career is doing okay though…silly love songs.   Here's another addition to this semester happiness soundtrack.







3 comments:

  1. Good questions, Dean. Powers' "Thassa" never gets bored, never disses religion OR irreligion (but does pronounce a desire "not to decide more than God"), and seems so totally comfortable in her skin and at home in the world that an anti-happy pill would never occur to her. She only gets unhappy when people try to hard to isolate and "borrow" whatever it is about her that makes her that way. So, a lit crit way of approaching your questions might be: how plausible or admirable a character is Thassa? I'm with Megan, myself: I'm inspired by her. She only needs to be a tiny bit contagious, to improve the emotional atmosphere for everyone around her. Sad sacks can have the opposite effect on a community, so I know which way I'd rather try to be. But then, I'm not a total misanthrope.

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  2. P.S. I like Sir Paul, but Silly Love Songs is kinda embarrassing. I admit, I used to listen to it on an 8-track...

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  3. When someone says that we would become bored with a completely happy world, or at least a world without sorrow, I wonder why they are so sure (not you; you only asked the question). We have never experienced that sort of world, and that judgment is based in a world which is not that sort. Perhaps we would adapt to live in a world without sorrow, as well.

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