Generally, your logic holds up imo, as it's something I've mulled over a lot.
An argument on the other side - which you partially hit on but I'll expand upon it - is that it is actually hyperlogical thinking when the information we are working with is limited due to the depression. We are depressed, and the present information we have is how that feels. Sure, we can somewhat remember the past, and what it may have been like to feel good, but when you're hurting your biology is going to focus itself on dealing with the hurt.
Think of it this way: you're running from a tiger. Sure you can remember a time when you felt safe before you were running from that tiger, but that can't make your body re-live the feeling of being safe, because it has to remain scared to motivate you to get to safety.
Apply to depression: sure you can remember that you didn't feel so bad at one point, but you can't make your body re-live it, so you can't give a fair comparison of the good you felt before to the psychic pain you feel now. The present feeling will always trump as the body enters its troubleshooting/diagnostic mode.
You start doing math, then - after all, we're trying to be logical - and you try to add up the good you've felt versus the bad to determine if the sum is positive or negative. But, as explained above, biology will force you to put higher value on the present negative.
One thing I have been trying to do is take significant mental notes when I get relief from depression. It's something you don't think to do, because you're finally relieved and there is no drive to correct anything.
Additionally, one might critique our ability to anticipate what the future holds and possbilities before us.
None of this is to say your logic isn't sound, just offering another perspective.
Your logic is absolutely sound and I appreciate your perspective.
I suppose from my own perspective, I'm not even sure I am depressed. Not deeply anyway.
My apetite is normal, my sleep pattern- normal, my sex drive (not that I have anyone to share it with!) normal. I don't feel a deep hatred of myself particularly. I'm annoyed when I screw things up but I don't feel a total failure to myself or my family. I can hold down a job. I can meet demanding deadlines when I need to. I still find certain things enjoyable.
It's more, that the things I hate, I REALLY hate. Like tidying and cleaning. That's what's causing my current tantrum! Overall though, life just contains an endless stream of chores and responsibilities that I simply don't want to do but can't effectively avoid.
It's not to the extreme of being completely constant. When I worked in retail on top, I was reaching for the anti-depressants! But it's enough for life overall to seem- really not worth the effort. Thinking about it, I'm not sure it's ever felt worth the effort. I think I was just a lot more compliant when I was young. I suppose I genuinely did get more out of pursuing my career too.
It's kind of odd actually. I was diagnosed with mild to moderate depression around 15 years ago- during my long stint in retail- unsurprisingly. At the time, the diagnosis actually comforted me as I thought- ok then. This is an illness so therefore, it can be cured. I'm not convinced it's so straight forward as that now. Plus, I think simply disliking a lot about the nature of life doesn't necessarily mean someone is depressed. More that maybe they just can't find enough ways to make life enjoyable for themselves (and survive.)
I don't know if you're familiar with Bryan Caplan, but he's an economist who argues that all mental illnesses are merely socially disapproved preferences. He draws upon the work of Thomas Szasz, a psychiatrist who's best known for rejecting the notion of mental illness (and who I'm guessing has been discussed to some extent here, given his stances on psychiatry and the right to die). I can't say I agree with the idea but I'm linking this
piece by the former because I think it's interesting.
Personally, I don't like the term
mental illness. I think it's too loaded. I'd prefer discussing "disorders" instead of "illnesses" or using "anomalous" instead of "ill" when referring to a mind. To define sickness entails defining wellness, and I just don't think that's as simple as it seems. I think some members here are fine with acknowledging that they're mentally ill, but I've seen other members who clearly display symptoms of "mental illness" as it's generally perceived (anhedonia, SH, endogenous suicidal ideation, etc.) but spurn the label and who do indeed seem to view their desire to die as, well, a socially disapproved preference.
The question of whether it's logical to want to die because you can't accept necessary aspects of life... just doesn't have an answer, imo—it all depends on the principles you start from, because you simply have to start somewhere. A promortalist would say that suicide is always a good idea, because one of their first principles is that the presence of pain is worse than the absence of pleasure. And a so-called normie would say suicide is wrong because one of
their first principles is that life is intrinsically good. The rest of us fall somewhere in between, but either way, where you end up generally depends on what your foundations are.
Thank you so much for linking that. I found it really interesting. I think I might have come across the term: 'meta preferences' before but not properly understood it so, this gave me a much better grasp.
Interesting that they described homosexuality and (I think it was) a deep aversion to a vegetable as 'meta preferences'. So basically- deeply felt preferences that we have less choice over in a way.
If I grasped this correctly, he's saying that depression itself- the preference to be unhappy- despite a person's circumstances is a meta-preference? I'm not sure really. I'd imagine an awful lot of depression is triggered directly by an aversion to something in a person's circumstances. Not always of course, it can hit out of the blue. But, if that were the case, wouldn't we have those meta preferences from the start?
Do only some people have the propensity to develop depression? Will they develop it despite their circumstances or, will something trigger it?
You wouldn't begin a promising career in marketing, love everything about it, leap out of bed in the mornings at the thought of going in to the office but then suddenly realise you hate everything about it, have no energy, can barely get out of bed in the mornings if it was
always your meta preference to hate marketing. So, what else changed?
It's definitely interesting. I definitely don't agree with it with respect to some specific diagnoses. Things like Bipolar, PTSD, Schizophrenia, Eating Disorders. They all have very specific traits. Unless he's saying that those particular people always have those meta preferences that make them susceptible to those conditions. But- PTSD for example is all cause and effect. You're not going to get PTSD unless you've experienced a traumatic event.
I don't know really. Maybe I don't have a proper grasp on it or, lack the intelligence to understand. So- is his argument that these conditions don't actually change the way our brains work?
I'm not convinced about that either. Someone suffering from Schizophrenia for example surely has a brain that's creating hallucinations. That's surely different to a neurotypical brain.
I certainly think that our brains can get stuck in a way of thinking. Part of how we learn is by doing things repetitively so- it doesn't surprise me that those of us who are pessimists and cynics become comfortable thinking in that way and feel reluctant to change. But I think a lot of people's unhappiness is triggered by a real life circumstance. I think a lot of people are unhappy because they simply can't see a feasible way of living how they want.