(May 2014)
Wednesday, 1 June 2016
'The Essential Schopenhauer' by Arthur Schopenhauer
“Life is a business that fails to meet its costs,”
declares Schopenhauer (1788-1860), setting off to demonstrate that we live in
the worst of all possible worlds. The human condition is that of “a pendulum
between suffering and boredom”, and yet we persist, drawn into and through
existence by an unsuppressable and unsatisfiable “will-to-live”, a malignant
innate force against we must struggle to escape. Life should consist of a
constant (paradoxical) struggle against one’s own willing, which “springs from
want, and hence from suffering” which in turn is “simply nothing but unfulfilled
and thwarted willing”. Schopenhauer’s strident pessimism and his investigations
into individual motivation introduced Eastern philosophies into European
thought, and underlie the work of Nietzsche, Freud, Wittgenstein, Tolstoy, Mann,
Borges, Beckett and many others. How then to go on? Society, and indeed all
functional existence, is predicated on collective and individual self-deception.
Thomas Bernhard puts it well in ‘Walking’: “There is no doubt that the art lies
in bearing what is unbearable and in not feeling that what is horrible is
something horrible. Of course we have to label this art the most difficult of
all. The art of existing against the facts.”
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