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Desire

Notes

Claim

Levels of desire:

  1. The thing itself - (chocolate), i.e Some things matter for what they are not what they do value
  2. Utility - The utility from the thing (pleasure), i.e Instrumental value treats things as means rather than ends value
  3. Second order - do we want to derive such utility from this thing Examine your desires not just your actions

Explanation

Complications arise when the thing we want is only a step towards our actual goal. Say that we want to catch a train in order to do something elsewhere. The value from catching the train is neither intrinsic nor instrumental since it derives it's utility from the next (future) step we shall take. It is as if all the series of steps are bundled into one when we try to evaluate the way we desire them. And what if one of them appears to fail? i.e it doesn't derive the desired utility, how does it affect all the others? Desire is inherently linked to epistemology. The way we perceive and what we believe about the world.

Why it matters

Therefore desire can be thought of as something that we want less of, because only through reducing desire we can achieve happiness Happiness is contentment.

Examples

Supporters

Opposers

Desire can be problematic when it causes Attachment distorts how we see the things we cling to, we become so focused on something that it takes over our mind, our identity, our being. It leads us often to Impulsivity is acting without conscious deliberation or filter and doing things we eventually We regret inaction more than action taken. Desire can often lead to Deferring happiness to future goals creates present suffering, where our happiness depends on the future, on "only if" we achieve what we desire, and we can't be happy with who we are, what we have, or our life right now.

Open questions

Visual

Desire perpetuates endless wanting over satisfaction

Overview

🔼Topic:: Avoidance and Defense Mechanisms ↩️Origin:: Elucidations 🔗Link:: https://share.snipd.com/episode/84d6576d-4f94-407c-a172-3774cbc9ca47

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