cheese
Prolific Member
Hmm. I think I've got a solution here. I'll forget my experiences and base my thinking entirely on a "possibly of something". As if that isn't wishful thinking.
My last paragraph wasn't referring to you. I was saying it's quite likely people's assessment of you (that you're 'not so different', don't think you're special, you're just like anybody else, etc) is biased by their inability/unwillingness to consider possible ways of being outside their own personal experience. I characterised it as 'wishful thinking' because people who experience emotional bonds don't tend to like the idea of people who don't (hence perjorative terms such as 'inhuman', 'monstrous', etc), and therefore would be less inclined to seriously consider the possibility that someone might be such a way.
Mr.Burke said:You have a boyfriend, I believe.
Uh, nope. Not sure where you got that from. You might have me mixed up with someone else.
Again, I can't help thinking you're addressing some imaginary person in your head, the one whose motives you're projecting onto my words. None of what you're saying here bears any resembance or relation to what I said, which was basically a simple response to your request for a 'logical' argument for attempting emotional bonds.Mr.Burke said:But the things you enjoy about him are most likely not the things I would enjoy in someone. Yes, I may have different preferences here, but they are so far different from everyone I've ever known that it seems like my standards are impossible. So to hope for the possibility of something impossible is just some form of false hope. Or wishful thinking if you prefer.
Essentially:
- People occasionally become physically incapacitated and require help to get pain relief/medical assistance.
- Help is more easily attained when one has a pool of people who are emotionally attached to one (thus making them more amenable to inconveniencing themselves for your sake).
- This level of emotional attachment is more easily achieved through long-term relationships.
- Long-term relationships are more easily achieved when there is two-way bonding.
That's it. It's a totally practical benefit. You've only mentioned positive benefits so far (gain attained from a neutral starting point). So I mentioned benefits attained from a negative starting point (ill health). I'm not bothered about the state of your relations with others, or the state of your emotions. I'm not suggesting or hoping you replicate my (imaginary) experiences with others. I haven't been preaching the benefits of emotional closeness/happiness/bonding/communal feeling/etc as I don't think they're relevant to your situation, nor to the OP. I haven't even been specifically pushing romantic relationships, so I'm not sure why you brought up my (non-existent) partner. I think you've conflated my posts with someone else's, or assumed some emotional intent, based on others' posts, behind my argument that isn't there. Or perhaps I've simply been unclear; sorry if so.
Mr.Burke said:Also, I expect other people to be manipulative and selfish because that's basically all I've ever seen in people with very few exceptions. It's human nature to care about yourself. It's a matter of survival. It's also human nature to use others for your own benefits. To go against human nature is to try to be something "greater than human". Also known as altruism and idealism. Though I am sure you can argue that we only got this far in civilization due to altruism and cooperation.
I meant people do not manipulate to the extent one with no qualms would, because of guilt wrought from morals/bonds.
I'd actually argue it's human nature to reject at least some solely self-directed impulses in favour of the greater good. We haven't achieved these succeses against our nature. Over the millenia, those with more communal behavioural tendencies outlasted those who were totally self-focused, hence the hard-wiring of emotional 'moral' impulses into the majority of the human race. Again, this is where emotions come in handy (ones such as guilt, compassion, anger on another's behalf, generosity, etc), since they allow us to speedily decide on courses of actions that are more or less beneficial to both us and the group that supports us, instead of wasting time on cost-benefit analyses. These emotions caused attributes such as 'altruism' to be ideal. There's a reason we have the moral system we do; it's not because we consciously decided it'd be a great idea. The great apes show the same tendencies.
But this point isn't very important. If people around you are selfish and manipulative, I guess that sucks for you. (Or not; are selfish and manipulative people easier to get things out of if you are the same way? Beating them at their own game, or something.)
Mr.Burke said:There are obviously experiences and knowledge outside of my experience, but I do not wish to pursue them without a good foundation.
Fair enough. I'm not suggesting you do. I thought you just wanted reasons. Make whatever choices you want.
Mr.Burke said:There needs to be obvious rewards for pursuing relationships (like some sort of business agreement) and not some faint idea of hope.
Cultivating stable relationships gives one reliable resources when ill. (Personal experience.) I know this isn't an immediate, tangible benefit, but it's like buying insurance. When you're paralysed with pain, slowly going numb, repeatedly throwing up the same puke because you can't turn your head enough to get it out of your mouth, having someone who will at short notice take you to a hospital for emergency attention is quite useful. Once this has happened a few times it becomes a more tangible benefit in your mind, I suppose. Especially when you realise that everyone is at risk of serious physical damage, not just the diseased.
It's not just about drastic situations like this though - having reliable resources in general is a good investment. I do think emotionally typical people have it easier, because bond-building and some level of commitment is more natural for them.
Mr.Burke said:Hope never got me anything but despair.
Ok, you sound bitter here. Tough.