deadpoet wrote:I like the pessimism of Schopenhauer (i.e., suicide) as well as the life-affirming doctrine of Nietzsche in the face of the Absurd. Never felt much for the second option.
Both ideas are the similar. Only one fits a kind of personality disposition, and the other, another.
I've been interested in both philosophers and even now I see how much their thoughts have influenced me.
The thing in itself is knowable, and through this 'knowability' humans can align themselves to a 'purely subjective will without knowledge'- Schopenhauer's 'ultimate good', without being pessimistic.
The idea of 'existence as suffering' - the experience of the absurd is no longer tenable. Because humans can now freely choose to be the will, 'the thing in itself'.