A Tale of Two Schopenhauers

Sandra Shapshay
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Abstract

Commentators generally see Schopenhauer as offering a hierarchy of ethical visions, with resignation at the top since it embodies the highest ethical insight into the fixed, grim nature of the world. The life of the compassionate person is a good but ultimately second-rate ideal, for the compassionate person still acts as though the sufferings of the world can be substantially lessened. This chapter calls this the “One Schopenhauer” view. By contrast, this chapter puts forth the “Two Schopenhauers” view. On this view, the ethics of compassion and resignationism cannot be fit neatly into a hierarchy because they are mutually antagonistic: Insofar as one resigns from the will-to-life, one does not live up to the compassionate injunction to “help everyone as much as you can”; and insofar as one lives compassionately, one does not resign from life. Thus, there seem to be two distinct and incompatible Schopenhauerian ethical stances on the world: the Schopenhauer who recommends resignationism, or the “the Knight of Despair,” and the Schopenhauer who recommends compassion, whom this chapter refers to as the “Knight with Hope.” This chapter argues that the interpretive fulcrum here—on the question of which of these incompatible Schopenhauerian ethical visions we should embrace—is the issue of hope: Are there good Schopenhauerian grounds for hope that the world can be substantially improved and suffering reduced?
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《两个叔本华的故事
评论家们普遍认为叔本华提供了一种伦理视野的等级制度,顺从在最顶端,因为它体现了对世界固定的、残酷的本质的最高伦理洞察力。富有同情心的人的生活是美好的,但最终是二流的理想,因为富有同情心的人仍然认为世界的痛苦可以大大减轻。本章称之为“叔本华一体”的观点。相反,本章提出了“两个叔本华”的观点。根据这种观点,同情和放弃主义的伦理不能整齐地融入一个等级制度,因为它们是相互对立的:只要一个人放弃了生命意志,他就没有履行“尽你所能帮助每个人”的同情禁令;只要一个人富有同情心地生活,他就不会放弃生命。因此,似乎有两种截然不同且互不相容的叔本华式的世界伦理立场:叔本华建议放弃主义,或“绝望骑士”,叔本华建议同情,本章将其称为“希望骑士”。本章认为,这里的解释支点——在这些不相容的叔本华伦理愿景中,我们应该拥抱哪一个的问题——是希望的问题:叔本华式的希望是否有良好的基础,可以使世界得到实质性改善,痛苦减少?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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