Quotes from Sigmund Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle

Quotes from Freud’s Beyond the Pleasure Principle

Here I am revisiting Sigmund Freud’s Beyond the Pleasure Principle.
Here I am looking for death again — Thanatos, my old friend.
Does this mean that I will go back to reading books like Ernest Becker’s The Denial of Death, Atul Gawande’s Being Mortal, Paul Kalanithi’s When Breath Becomes Air, etc.?
Does this mean that I will go back to saying that life is driven by death?
We shall see.
Maybe I’ll say, We are nothing but instances of self-conscious Death.
Later.
For now, I’ll be saving the quotes I like in a blog post and call it a day.
Outside, the birds are singing, and that’s where I need to be.

Quotes from Sigmund Freud’s Beyond the Pleasure Principle

It must be pointed out, however, that strictly speaking it is incorrect to talk of the dominance of the pleasure principle over the course of mental processes. If such a dominance existed, the immense majority of our mental processes would have to be accompanied by pleasure or to lead to pleasure, whereas universal experience completely contradicts any such conclusion.

Sigmund Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle

Most of the unpleasure we experience is perceptual unpleasure.

Sigmund Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle

“Anxiety” describes a particular state of expecting the danger or preparing for it, even though it may be an unknown one. “Fear” requires a definite object of which to be afraid. “Fright”, however, is the name we give to the state a person gets into when he has run into danger without being prepared for it; it emphasizes the factor of surprise.

Sigmund Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle

In this way the first instinct came into being: the instinct to return to the inanimate state.

Sigmund Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle

What we are left with is the fact that the organism wishes to die only in its own fashion.

Sigmund Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle

We shall find courage to assume that there really does exist in the mind a compulsion to repeat which overrides the pleasure principle.

Sigmund Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle

The pleasure principle seems actually to serve the death instincts.

Sigmund Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle
Summarizing Kant's Critique of Judgement and Discussing Works of Fine Art

Notes and Quotes from Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Judgement

Boredom makes you do things you never imagined you’d do, like revisiting the works of Kant, for example.

For ten or so days, I’ve been reading Critique of Judgment for absolutely no reason other than “because I picked it up while I was organizing the shelves.”

Honestly, unlike the first time, I did enjoy reading it this time. I wonder why. Is it because I have recently celebrated my 36th birthday? Is enjoying Kant a sign that I am growing old? I’m only half-joking. I’m addicted to philosophy, and, at this point, I’d read anything I can get my hands on.

A drinking buddy once asked me, “Why do you read philosophy?”
“To find the answer to the question you just asked,” I responded.
We both laughed back then, but, in retrospect, it was a good answer.
Imagine people reading philosophy to only understand why people read philosophy.
But this has nothing to do with Kant or his Critique of Judgement

So, let’s start with table that summarizes the first 100 pages or so of the book, shall we?

Comparison table: the agreeable, the beautiful, the sublime, the good

Notes on the comparison table:

  1. I use the phrase “subjectively universal” because Kant uses it. The beautiful is subjectively universal because when a man “declares something to be beautiful, he expects the same delight from others.” Also, because we’re dealing with aesthetics, “there can be no objective rule of taste by which what is beautiful may be defined.”
  2. Purposiveness without a purpose is a phrase that is repeated multiple times in the book. While an object may look like it has an inherent purpose, it may not actually have a purpose. (Look up “German Idealism”).

The Kantian checklist for identifying works of fine art

Now, let’s say we’re dealing with a work of art. How can we know that the piece can be classified as fine art? Based on Kant’s Critique of Judgement, we can create a checklist and ask ourselves the following questions:

  1. Can we say this is the work of a genius (as defined by Kant), of someone who has the technical skills and the innate capacity for artistic creation?
  2. Can we say there’s purposiveness in the work of art without actual purpose?
  3. Are we experiencing a disinterested pleasure, a pleasure that has nothing to do with our personal desires, preferences, or interests?
  4. Are the expressions of the aesthetic ideas beyond our capacity to understand them through concepts?
  5. Does it allow the free play of imagination and understanding?
  6. Does it ask for our reflective judgement and interpretation?
  7. Would the “common sense” in us say that it’s a work of fine art?
  8. Is it original, and does it make us experience something new?
  9. Do we admire it without (or before) knowing why we admire it?

If we’ve answered yes to all (or most) of the above, then we can say that we’re dealing with a work of fine art.

Quotes from Kant’s Critique of Judgement

“Only by what one does heedless of enjoyment, in complete freedom and independently of what nature could passively procure for him, does he give to his life, as the existence of a person, an absolute worth. Happiness, with all its plethora of pleasures, is far from being an unconditioned good.”

“Only when people’s needs have been satisfied can we tell who among the crowd has taste or not.”

“Poetry (which owes its origin almost entirely to genius and is least willing to be led by precepts or example) holds the first rank among all the arts.”

“We are unable, therefore, objectively to substantiate the proposition: There is an intelligent original Being.”

“Now since learning is nothing but imitation, the greatest ability, or aptness as a pupil (capacity), is still, as such, not equivalent to genius.”

February 17, 2024: Practicing Philosophy

Practicing philosophy is neither about the question nor the answer. It’s about experiencing a question that strives for an answer using you — your mind, your spirit. We can even say the following: Practicing philosophy is about forming and attempting to answer a question that is unresolvable. (Everything that falls outside of this, no longer belongs to the practice of philosophy; it belongs to science. Although, it is also important to note that all knowledge, including science and religion, belongs to philosophy.)

A philosopher needs a good amount of observable truths or facts to generate hypotheses as well as theories. But he doesn’t need to generate truths or facts.

A philosophy is always personal. A philosophy — if it really is a philosophy — can only disguise itself as being impersonal. When someone reads your philosophical text, a part of you replaces a part of him. He becomes a little more like you — a little more like your philosophy. You transfer (duplicate) a part of you into the other. We can call this the reproduction of ideas because it is how they survive, evolve, etc.

Reading philosophy is a lot like eating. Your mind will digest what it can (or needs to) digest. The rest will turn into philosophical fat or feces. Coming back to a philosophical text is a repetition that teaches you something new. It changes you differently. Rereading a philosophical work is not the same as relearning the same thing. You cannot relearn. You can only learn new things through repetition.

Philosophy is the love of wisdom, not wisdom. Loving something is different than being something. If you love a woman, you are the lover of the woman. You do not become the woman by loving her.

Philosophizing is not something you do to get somewhere. Philosophizing is something you do when you get somewhere. It is the child of boredom; and therefore, it is a leisure activity. In fact, this is what I’ve been doing for the last 30 minutes or so…