Compassionate Curmudgeon: Why we must root ourselves in the real world
27 points
3 days ago
| 3 comments
| theamericanscholar.org
| HN
DarkNova6
3 hours ago
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I was intrigued and ready to defend the premise of the headline... but starting with life's greatest misanthropist and anti-life philosopher (ok, maybe hyperbole) is a big no-go for me.
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scandox
53 minutes ago
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> From this vast pile of empirical data, Schopenhauer drew a simple maxim: “Do no harm; and help others to the extent you can.”

> This conviction led Schopenhauer to be an ardent abolitionist, a keen advocate of prison and asylum reform, and a fierce opponent of animal cruelty. It is curious to think that his beloved standard poodle, Atma, knew what men and women did not know: that his master believed in the care and concern for all living beings. At Schopenhauer’s funeral in 1860, his first biographer, Wilhelm Gwinner, suggested that “ordinary people saw the misanthrope in him,” but Schopenhauer “was full of compassion” for them. This may have been difficult for Schopenhauer’s contemporaries to perceive.

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empressplay
4 hours ago
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Like life, this article is mostly pointless.
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orion138
2 hours ago
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This made my day. Thank you!
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kingkawn
3 hours ago
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No more tedious cultural mode than contemporary clarification of old philosophy
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