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Dopamine Nation by Dr. Anna Lembke

  • Don
  • January 4, 2022 at 10:13 AM
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  • Don
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    • January 5, 2022 at 10:38 AM
    • #21

    Let's get away from the "unable to be filled" metaphor for now. I still think it's applicable, but it's obviously not helpful in our current context of this discussion.

    Possibly a more apt metaphor is the old Western movie set where there appears to be a main street of the town, but it's only a line of facades. The facades may be indistinguishable from actual buildings, but walk through them and you're in the desert. There's nothing there. It's an empty space. Likewise, the empty desires are nothing but attractive shells or facades. There may be bright neon signs on the facades with POWER, MONEY, etc, but there's nothing to back them up. To put it colloquially, "there's no there there."

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    • January 5, 2022 at 10:49 AM
    • #22
    Quote from Don

    Possibly a more apt metaphor is the old Western movie set where there appears to be a main street of the town, but it's only a line of facades. The facades may be indistinguishable from actual buildings, but walk through them and you're in the desert. There's nothing there. I

    Yes that is probably a better analogy, but not one that I would associate with the word "empty." There IS something there, the false front is there.

    I don't say that to be disagreeable, though, but only to emphasize the height that will be necessary to climb. ;)

    Carry on as I am looking forward to this! That's what "gods among men" are supposed to do - talk about things like this!

  • Don
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    • January 5, 2022 at 10:50 AM
    • #23
    Quote from Cassius

    There IS something there, the false front is there.

    Yes. The desire exists. There's just nothing to back it up

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    • January 5, 2022 at 11:04 AM
    • #24
    Quote from Don

    Yes. The desire exists. There's just nothing to back it up

    Yes that emphasizes how I do not think this terminology makes sense. If you want to say that the type of desire cannot be definition be filled for some reason, then that's one thing, but the word "empty" seems to me to have nothing to do with the discussion.

    If we feel the desire, it exists. Maybe the issue is in the definition of desire. I consider a desire to be a feeling, not concept. I "feel a desire" - I don't "feel a concept."

    If I can feel something, then it exists, and the word "empty" comes dangerously close to asserting that the feeling does not exist, which would almost certainly be inconsistent with the rest of Epicurean philosophy.

  • Don
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    • January 5, 2022 at 11:36 AM
    • #25
    Quote from Cassius

    Yes that emphasizes how I do not think this terminology makes sense

    Well, in some ways, you're not really arguing with me; you're arguing with Epicurus. He's the one who decided to use the same word to describe both the structure of the universe (atoms and *void*) and a category of desires. Just saying.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 12:49 PM
    • #26
    Quote from Don

    He's the one who decided to use the same word to describe both the structure of the universe (atoms and *void*) and a category of desires. Just saying.

    I strongly agree that Epicurus' employment of an inflection of the ancient Greek word for "spatial void" to signify "groundless desire" is significant. I see this stylistic device, among few others, as an unmistakable, poetic signature of a unique mind who re-appropriated tired, traditional connotations for the sake of providing fresh observations.

    While he re-defines "pleasure", it was not such a drastic leap for the Hellenistic mind to make (unlike, herein, I argue, is the case with "kenos" / "kenon" / "kenen") because "hedone" still referred to "pleasure", just a more stable, fulfilling type of "pleasure" than they may have been used to supposing. Herein, Epicurus is completely re-defining the idea of a "destructive desire". It's not just [1] a "distraction", "addiction", "obsession", "self-destructive pursuit", or "wasted energy", rather, it is [2] "void", "space", "NULL", "literally, within the category of those things which do not exist". The former meaning [1] connects the notion of a "destructive desire", inherently, with desire, itself; with "pleasure". Desire, necessarily, was seen as being a destructive thing. Thus, from an Epicurean vantage point, the word one [2] should describe a destructive desire differently than the pleasure that entices desire, itself, and, rather, needs to be re-defined within a larger context. The destructiveness of desire has nothing to do with the feeling of desire, but rather, with the intellectual vacuity to which by which it may be motivated. If a desire has no natural meaning, no healthy purpose, then it cannot be connected with the natural canon, with raw sensation, honest feeling, and natural anticipations. It must be connected with some kind of fallacious "Logic" that have been mistaken for those original apprehensions impressed upon the mind.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 12:57 PM
    • #27

    In an Epicurean dictionary, the only word that could exist (since all Epicurean observations refer to real objects that host real existence, as opposed to imaginary speculations) to refer to an idea that was acquired from somewhere besides nature is, literally "the infinite spatial void of nothingness". Epicurus recognizes that the most FRANK description of a "delusion", "illusory opinion", "vain excuse", was, truly, "empty space". A proposition that does not correspond with the Kanon of raw, external stimulations, internal emotions, and pre-rational mental impressions can neither be considered, nor is it worth consideration, like void, which can neither act, nor be acted upon. It is the least "real" "thing" there is.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 1:12 PM
    • #28

    It's also a good way to arm yourself with a vocabulary to call your opponent's argument as ZERO, rather than, as American media has shown me, waste your time giving your moronic opponent's utterly vacuous statement the benefit of being a real idea worthy of consideration and genuine reflection. A Skeptic could write a thousand books refuting the most moronic ideas that have ever been proposed by the least functional, least observant people who have lived; a more prudent philosopher would see no need to refute utterly vacuous ideas, and only consider those that currently hold dominion over people who are susceptible to such manipulation. If all "ideas" are void, and only gain substance if they connect with pre-existing natural impulses, then we don't have to waste time supposing that we live in a cave of ideas ... we live in reality and we assume reality to be real, and an idea that does not comport to this reality cannot have come from the substance of the reality, itself, rather, it comes from nothing, void. It is a consequence of a person directing their attention toward something that literally does not exist. Otherwise, they would be engaging a real thing with real consequences. In this case, they are accepting a vain hypothesis as being as definite as the heat of a flame, and it is obvious to everyone who has not swallowed the intellectual kool-aid of "the Logic".

  • Don
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    • January 5, 2022 at 1:27 PM
    • #29

    Thanks, Nate, for your responses! You are more passionate and articulate than I was.

    Quote from Nate

    While he re-defines "pleasure", it was not such a drastic leap for the Hellenistic mind to make

    Before anyone else comments on your comment above, I, too, think Epicurus "re-defined" (or clarified, I might say) the word "pleasure" to include biological homeostasis, namely ataraxia and aponia, specifically as pleasure. Other philosophers of his time posited that there was a neutral state between pleasure and pain. My thought is that Epicurus specifically says "no, when you're feeling in balance, your body's working well, your mind is untroubled, that is a pleasure."

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    • January 5, 2022 at 2:23 PM
    • #30

    I do not see myself arguing against what you guys are saying. I see this as an issue similar to use of the term "gods" which does not in American English convey the meaning and definition that Epicurus held to apply to gods.

    We cannot use the term "God" without explanation any more than we can use the word "empty" without explanation if we expect people to understand us.

    So I see myself as agreeing with your conclusion as long as you are annexing to your conclusion the explanation that you are providing here.

    So I would say that "Empty" in American English does not convey the meaning we are wishing to convey. I don't see that you are yet suggesting a short phrase or combination of words that does the job, but that should be the goal, so that the word "empty" does not confuse people just like an unexplained use of the word "gods" confuses people

    In both situations, clear speech and meaning requires explanation, just like we cannot throw the original Greek words at Americans and expect them to be understood.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 2:33 PM
    • #31
    Quote from Marco

    8. If a desire appears to be insatiable, it is likely because a person is otherwise unhappy or because the desire is for something impossible.

    9. When a person is focused on an impossible desire, such as to live forever, the poor fit of substitute pleasures makes them feel their ordinary desires are insatiable.

    (This quote by Marco was originally from Elaine)

    I've joined in here a little late...but wanted to say that this really makes sense for me.

    Here a helpful analogy from Marshall Rosenberg (originator of Nonviolent Communication):

    ...Don't go to the hardware store if you want to buy eggs.

    So by "empty" we actually mean impossible to fullful.

    So much of mental suffering comes when we try to pursue "empty" desires. Some people have stronger habits around pursuing things that are "empty" and are unable to reason what is "empty" and what is real.

    About the word "empty" - both the same usage in English and Greek - the word can appy to physical objects or to mental ideas.

    Objects that can hold things (boxes, cups, etc.) can at times be empty.

    Ideas that can hold things (truth, validity, reason, accuracy) can at times be empty.

  • Don
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    • January 5, 2022 at 2:52 PM
    • #32

    Points taken, Cassius .

    I like Eikadistes 's "vacuous."

    Cogitating further. More thoughts to come eventually.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 3:08 PM
    • #33
    Quote from Kalosyni

    Objects that can hold things (boxes, cups, etc.) can at times be empty.

    Ideas that can hold things (truth, validity, reason, accuracy) can at times be empty.

    I picked K's comment to quote largely at random, but the point I think is important is there.

    I think this is important because I get the idea that in conjunction with discussions (us I mean, not Epicurean necessarily) which reference "empty" there it is also frequently implied that certain types of desires are ALWAYS "empty." That may be as much of my problem with this phrasing as anything else.

    Is anyone thinking that there is a list of desires that is "ALWAYS" empty? I am thinking of the classic fame, power, riches, etc. Those may strike me as always dangerous, but NOT always "empty" and some degree of fulfillment of those is generally necessary in life.

    So what I am suggesting as part of this discussion that we make clear the "relative nature" and "subjectivity" of these issues, because if we cross the line into saying "XXXX desire is ALWAYS empty" I have a feeling we are on that slippery slope to Platonism. That may apply to "I want to live forever" which is physically impossible for humans, but I am not aware of too many such desires that might be physically impossible to at least get some benefit from pursuing.

    There's a lot of subtlety here to be considered.

  • Don
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    • January 5, 2022 at 3:33 PM
    • #34

    Honestly, I still like "empty."

    Plus, I would say a desire for power only for power's sake is always empty.

    A desire for money only for money's sake is always empty.

    A desire for fame only for fame's sake is always empty.

    Those desires cannot be fulfilled and will end in frustration or, at least, a neverending quest to fulfill them.

    But, for example, a desire for enough money to achieve a goal is finite and achievable.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 3:39 PM
    • #35

    Well what you are saying there is that the desire for anything other than pleasure itself is just a means to something else, but again power, money, and fame do all have their legitimate uses , I would argue, even under the strictest Epicurean analysis.

    You can say that the desire for UNLIMITED amounts of those things are "empty" as impossible to obtain, but if t hat is what you are saying then to be clear you are saying that it is the UNLIMITED aspect which is impossible to attain and therefore "vain" "delusive" or "whatever words you'd like to use.

    But none of that is self-explanatory just by using the word "empty"

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    • January 5, 2022 at 7:07 PM
    • #36

    I noticed in the text from Torquatus while editing this week's podcast:

    Quote

    [60] There is also death which always hangs over them like the stone over Tantalus, and again superstition, which prevents those who are tinged by it from ever being able to rest. Moreover they have no memories for their past good fortune, and no enjoyment of their present; they only wait for what is to come, and as this cannot but be uncertain, they are wasted with anguish and alarm; and they are tortured most of all when they become conscious, all too late, that their devotion to wealth or military power, or influence, or fame has been entirely in vain. For they achieve none of the pleasures which they ardently hoped to obtain and so underwent numerous and severe exertions.

    Don I presume this ("entirely in vain") is pretty much the same sentiment we are discussing? If so maybe we can find some points of comparison with the Latin from this section.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 8:46 PM
    • #37

    Alternate translation:

    Moreover, there is death, the stone of Tantalus ever hanging over men's heads; and superstition, that poisons and destroys all peace of mind. Besides, they do not recollect their past nor enjoy their present blessings; they merely look forward to those of the future, and as these are of necessity uncertain, they are consumed with agony and terror; and the climax of their torment is when they perceive too late that all their dreams of wealth or station, power or fame, have come to nothing. For they never attain any of the pleasures, the hope of which inspired them to undergo all their arduous toils.

    LacusCurtius • Cicero — De Finibus, Book I

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    • January 5, 2022 at 8:50 PM
    • #38

    [60] accedit etiam mors, quae quasi saxum Tantalo semper impendet,1 tum superstitio, qua qui est imbutus2 quietus esse numquam potest. praeterea bona praeterita non meminerunt, praesentibus non fruuntur, futura modo expectant, quae quia certa esse non possunt, conficiuntur3 et angore et metu maximeque cruciantur, cum sero sentiunt frustra se aut pecuniae studuisse aut imperiis aut opibus aut gloriae. nullas enim consequuntur voluptates, quarum potiendi spe inflammati multos labores magnosque susceperant.

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    • January 5, 2022 at 9:12 PM
    • #39
    Quote from Cassius

    Don I presume this ("entirely in vain") is pretty much the same sentiment we are discussing? If so maybe we can find some points of comparison with the Latin from this section.

    The alternative translation just has "have come to nothing" which is comparable to "in vain" but even better, from my perspective, since it also equates to "empty" (nothing). The applicable Latin appears to be nullas: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?do…Aentry%3Dnullus.

    Maybe desires that come to nothing instead of "empty" desires?

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    • January 5, 2022 at 10:46 PM
    • #40
    Quote from Don

    Maybe desires that come to nothing instead of "empty" desires

    I am not wedded to any particular formulation but yes I do think that has a more meaningful ring to it. So we could be talking about an "idiom" here that explains the awkwardness I am sensing in the single word "empty"

    I haven't thought of that "idiom" word lately in our context here, but I was just using it in another context earlier this week about someone who was raised overseas and who expressed confusion over the meaning of "throwing the baby out with the bathwater."

    Maybe our lexicon or FAQ ought to include a list of actual or probable Epicurean "idioms"

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      June 16, 2025 at 11:42 AM

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