this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2024
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[โ€“] nicknonya@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 points 4 months ago (1 children)

when i say that it's depression turned into philosophy i mean it in the sense that it is a philosophy that will inevitably lead to depression, or at the very least a skewed world view (think you'll see a red car and you're going to spot a lot of red cars, think existence is suffering and you'll probably focus on suffering a lot).

interesting breakdown tho, i'm glad that you still have hope. i dislike antinatalism and similar philosophies mostry due to their "doomerism" and belief that experiences are somehow cumulative

[โ€“] Katrisia@lemm.ee 3 points 4 months ago

Oh! That's a complicated consequence, yes. I cannot lie and say that studying sad things won't ever make one sad. It's... hard.

I don't think it is a rule that it is going to warp one's vision, but I've seen people getting depressed and definitely biased when studying philosophical pessimism. It seems like something that only happens in jokes or memes, but no, reading Arthur Schopenhauer or whoever can be dangerous if one is already vulnerable to depression, isolation, etc.

I definitely advise discretion. And it's not because they're dark monsters, monks of death dressed in black robes. There's nothing too morbid about the books; that's probably just the myth time has created around them. In reality, their danger is just pondering on dark aspects of life that can be disheartening if one is not prepared. Even when the reading is for high school or university, or for curiosity, I think these authors should be picked with an open mind and a serene "heart".

Thank you for reading and answering.