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History Science Literature Education Book Reviews Historical Narratives Science Discussions Book RecommendationsIf you enjoy this podcast and would like to support its production, you can contribute via PayPal at: paypal.me/AVillavicencioUsbeck
History Science Literature Education Book Reviews Historical Narratives Science Discussions Book Recommendations
In the final episode of our journey through Schopenhauer's thought, we arrive at his most challenging and radical destination. After establishing that the will to live is the source of all suffering, we explore his final answer: the denial of the will to live.
This episode tackles his profound conclusion, starting with the critical distinction between denying the will and suicide. We unpack why Schopenhauer saw suicide not as an escape, but as a tragic final assertion of the will—like smashing the chessboard because you're losing the game. True denial, in contrast, is to see through the illusion and walk away from the game altogether.
Discover how this denial manifests as asceticism: the life of the saint who, through a profound insight into the world's suffering, voluntarily breaks the will by starving it of desire through chastity, poverty, and fasting. We then confront the ultimate mystery: What remains when the will is extinguished? Schopenhauer describes a state that, to us, appears as 'nothing,' but is in fact the profound peace of Nirvana—the ultimate deliverance from the restless, painful striving that defines our world.