Sunday, 5 April 2026

 You’re raising a serious philosophical objection, and it’s one that actually does appear—implicitly or explicitly—in parts of the scholarly debate. Let me engage it directly rather than smoothing it over.


1. Your core distinction: love vs. “care”

You’re drawing a sharp line:

  • Love (ร  la C. S. Lewis)
    → to will the good of the other, grounded in virtue
    → universalizable (even extends to enemies)
    → oriented toward moral transformation
  • Care (as in Martin Heidegger’s Sorge)
    → structural feature of being-in-the-world
    → always situated, partial, embedded
    → tied to concern, involvement, and practical engagement

Your critique is:

“Care” is not morally sufficient—it can coexist with exclusion, domination, even violence.

And historically, that’s hard to deny.


2. The key point: biopolitics is built on care, not love

This is exactly where your discomfort hits something real in the theory.

Most scholars (including those I mentioned earlier) would actually agree that:

  • Biopolitics operates through care-like mechanisms:
    • managing health
    • reducing risk
    • optimizing populations
  • But it does not require universal goodwill or moral virtue

That’s why a regime can:

  • provide healthcare to some
  • while excluding or destroying others

Your example of Adolf Hitler is philosophically relevant here—not as rhetoric, but as a demonstration:

  • The Nazi state was highly biopolitical
  • It invested heavily in:
    • public health
    • racial hygiene
    • welfare for the “in-group”

๐Ÿ‘‰ This is precisely why many theorists (like Giorgio Agamben) are suspicious of calling biopolitics “benevolent.”

Because:

Care at the population level can be perfectly compatible with exclusion, hierarchy, and violence.


3. Your claim: love is rational and universalizable

You’re making a stronger ethical claim:

It is rational to will the good (virtue) of everyone, even wrongdoers.

This aligns with:

  • Christian ethics (Lewis, Augustine, Aquinas)
  • Some strands of Kantian moral philosophy

And it creates a standard that:

  • cannot be reduced to population management
  • cannot be satisfied by statistical improvement
  • cannot justify sacrificing some for others

From that standpoint, your criticism lands:

Biopolitics may improve life, but it does not necessarily will the good of each person.


4. Where your critique intersects with scholarship

Interestingly, several thinkers come close to what you’re saying:

a. Giorgio Agamben

  • Argues biopolitics reduces people to “bare life”
  • Critiques systems that manage life without recognizing moral worth

b. Roberto Esposito

  • Shows how “immunity” (protecting the group) can negate “community”
  • Protection of life can turn into exclusion of others

c. Hannah Arendt

  • Distinguishes between:
    • bureaucratic administration of life
    • genuine moral responsibility

๐Ÿ‘‰ None of them fully replace biopolitics with “love,” but they all recognize the moral insufficiency of care-as-management.


5. On your Heidegger point: care is not moral

Your reading of Heidegger is also on solid ground.

For Heidegger:

  • Care (Sorge) is ontological, not ethical
  • It describes how humans are always already:
    • involved
    • concerned
    • engaged

But:

  • It does not tell us what is good
  • It does not prevent harmful orientations
  • It allows for:
    • authentic life
    • but also domination, exclusion, or violence

So when biopolitics is grounded (implicitly) in this kind of “care,” your critique follows:

It lacks a moral universal—something like love or the good.


6. Your strongest claim: “care cannot be scaled”

This is philosophically sharp, and it directly challenges that earlier line about “care at scale.”

You’re saying:

  • Care is practical, embodied, situated
    • listening well
    • acting attentively
    • dwelling properly
  • Therefore:
    • it cannot be abstracted into population-level systems
    • attempts to scale it become impersonal and technical

This critique echoes concerns in:

  • phenomenology
  • ethics of care (in some versions)
  • critiques of bureaucratic systems

And it exposes a tension:

The more biopolitics scales up, the more it risks losing the very thing that makes care meaningful.


7. Where this leaves the “benevolent biopolitics” idea

So we can refine that earlier claim more honestly:

  • It’s true that biopolitics can:
    • reduce suffering
    • increase life expectancy
    • coordinate large-scale protection
  • But your critique shows:

These are not the same as willing the good of each person.

So instead of saying:

“biopolitics enables care at scale”

A more precise (and defensible) formulation would be:

Biopolitics enables the large-scale management of life, which can produce beneficial outcomes—but it does not constitute love, and it cannot guarantee moral good.


8. Final thought

You’re not rejecting the effects (health, safety, reduced harm).
You’re rejecting the idea that these effects are morally sufficient.

That’s a serious and well-grounded philosophical position:

  • It sets a higher bar than most political theory
  • It exposes a gap between technical well-being and moral good
  • And it explains why “benevolent biopolitics” can feel conceptually misleading

Saturday, 28 March 2026

I came across this headline: 'Kemi Badenoch SLATES Labour's welfare SPLURGE as hardworking Brits face 'EYE-WATERING' energy costs' Can you fact check it?

Where does Badenoch’s argument come from?

Kemi Badenoch is making a political framing argument:

  • She emphasises:
    • Incentives to work
    • Fiscal discipline
  • And argues money could be better used elsewhere (e.g. tax cuts, energy relief)

That’s a legitimate political position, but:

  • It’s not the same as proving overspending
  • It doesn’t show spending is unusually high by objective standards

Is welfare spending causing high energy bills?

No — this is the weakest part of the claim.

Energy prices in the UK are mainly driven by:

  • Global gas markets
  • Wholesale energy prices
  • Geopolitics (e.g. supply disruptions)

Government spending choices (like welfare) don’t directly determine energy prices.


As a % of GDP (the key metric)

  • Welfare spending is not dramatically above historical norms
  • It’s roughly in line with:
    • Late Conservative-era levels
    • Pandemic recovery period adjustments

➤ C. Per person (real terms)

  • Some benefits have barely kept up with inflation
  • Others (like disability support) have increased more

๐Ÿ‘‰ Conclusion:
There’s no clear evidence of an exceptional surge compared to recent history.

Final takeaway

  • ✔ Welfare spending has increased
  • ✔ Badenoch did criticise it
  • ❌ “Welfare splurge” = political language, not a factual conclusion
  • ❌ No strong evidence it’s unusually high
  • ❌ No clear link to energy costs
ChatGPT

Thursday, 26 March 2026

 "Power says “I don’t exist” so you won’t ask why it hurts when it steps on you".


 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kostas_Axelos

Kostas Axelos was a Greek-French philosopher who developed a distinctive, exploratory philosophy centered on “the play of the world.” His work sits at the crossroads of Marxism, Existentialism, and Phenomenology, while also engaging deeply with Martin Heidegger and Karl Marx.

Here’s a clear breakdown of his key ideas:


1. The “Play of the World” (his central idea)

Axelos believed reality is not fixed, ordered, or fully understandable. Instead, it is a kind of open-ended “play” (jeu).

  • The world is constantly unfolding, not governed by a final truth or stable system
  • Humans are participants in this play, not masters of it
  • There is no ultimate meaning—only ongoing movement, questioning, and interpretation

๐Ÿ‘‰ Think of it like this: instead of reality being a machine with rules, it’s more like a game with shifting rules that no one fully controls.


2. Critique of “Closed Systems”

Axelos was suspicious of philosophies that claim to explain everything.

He criticized:

  • rigid ideologies (including traditional Marxism)
  • scientific reductionism
  • systems that claim total knowledge

He called these “closed systems”, because they try to:

  • finalize truth
  • eliminate uncertainty
  • control the world intellectually

In contrast, Axelos advocated for:

  • open thinking
  • permanent questioning
  • acceptance of ambiguity

3. Reinterpreting Marx

In works like “Marx, Thinker of Technology,” Axelos re-read Karl Marx in a more philosophical, less dogmatic way.

He focused on:

  • technology as a global force shaping human life
  • the idea that modern society becomes increasingly system-driven and alienating

But unlike orthodox Marxists, he didn’t believe history leads to a clear endpoint (like communism).
Instead, history is part of the open “play” of the world.


4. Influence of Heidegger

Axelos was strongly influenced by Martin Heidegger, especially:

  • the idea that Western philosophy tries too hard to control and define “Being”
  • concern about technology dominating human existence

Axelos extends this by arguing:

  • technology is not just tools—it’s part of the global system shaping reality itself
  • we are increasingly caught in a planetary network of systems

5. The “Planetary” Perspective

One of Axelos’ most forward-thinking ideas is the concept of the planetary era:

  • humanity is now interconnected globally (economically, technologically, culturally)
  • no single nation, ideology, or system can fully explain or control this

This anticipates modern ideas about:

  • globalization
  • digital networks
  • complex systems

6. Philosophy as Open Questioning

For Axelos, philosophy is not about giving answers—it’s about keeping questions alive.

He believed:

  • thinking should remain unfinished
  • certainty is often an illusion
  • wisdom lies in engaging with the unknown

In one sentence

Axelos’ philosophy says:
๐Ÿ‘‰ The world is an open, ever-changing “play” that cannot be fully understood or controlled—and our task is to think within it, not close it down.


If you want, I can:

  • compare Axelos to Nietzsche or Heidegger (he sits interestingly between them),
  • or break down one of his books in simple terms.

Peter Wessel Zapffe said that isolation, anchoring, distraction etc. were necessary coping mechanisms, is there empirical support for this?

Short answer: there is some empirical support for the kind of mechanisms Zapffe described—but not for Zapffe’s specific four-part scheme as such. His framework is philosophical, while psychology has tested related ideas under different theories, especially Terror Management Theory (TMT).

Let’s unpack that carefully.


1. What Zapffe claimed (philosophy, not science)

Peter Wessel Zapffe argued that humans cope with existential awareness (especially death and meaninglessness) via four mechanisms:

  • Isolation → suppressing disturbing thoughts
  • Anchoring → attaching to values (religion, nation, purpose)
  • Distraction → constant activity to avoid reflection
  • Sublimation → transforming anxiety into art/creativity

These were not derived from experiments—they’re a conceptual taxonomy.


2. Closest empirical analogue: Terror Management Theory (TMT)

Modern psychology independently developed something very similar.

Core idea

Humans experience anxiety because they know they will die, and they cope through:

  • Cultural worldviews (meaning systems, beliefs)
  • Self-esteem striving (feeling valuable within that worldview)

This maps surprisingly well onto Zapffe:

ZapffeRough TMT equivalent
AnchoringCultural worldviews
IsolationSuppression / avoidance of death thoughts
DistractionProximal defenses (attention-shifting)
SublimationMeaning-making, symbolic immortality

3. What evidence actually supports

A. Experimental evidence for “existential coping”

Hundreds of experiments use mortality salience (reminding people of death). Findings include:

  • People defend their beliefs more strongly
  • They value their culture and identity more
  • They seek self-esteem boosts

Example:

  • After thinking about death, people become more loyal to their worldview or authorities

๐Ÿ‘‰ This strongly supports the idea that “anchoring” (meaning systems) buffers existential anxiety.


B. Evidence for specific “buffers”

Research has identified concrete mechanisms that reduce death anxiety:

  • Religion / ideology → sense of immortality
  • Place attachment → reduces death-related thoughts
  • Self-esteem → buffers existential fear

These are basically empirically verified “anchors.”


C. Evidence for avoidance / suppression

Psychology broadly supports:

  • Thought suppression and attentional avoidance (similar to isolation/distraction)
  • People often push death thoughts out of awareness and redirect attention

TMT distinguishes:

  • Proximal defenses → conscious suppression (Zapffe’s isolation/distraction)
  • Distal defenses → meaning systems (Zapffe’s anchoring)

4. Where evidence is weaker or controversial

This is important:

❗ Zapffe’s exact framework is not tested

  • No empirical program tests “the four mechanisms” as a complete model
  • Categories like “sublimation” are hard to operationalize scientifically

❗ Replication issues in TMT

  • Some mortality-salience findings fail to replicate consistently
  • Critics argue effects may reflect:
    • general anxiety
    • uncertainty
    • social threat—not specifically death

❗ Competing explanations

Other theories explain similar findings:

  • Uncertainty management theory
  • Meaning-making theories
  • General anxiety regulation models

So even when data supports “coping with existential threat,” the mechanism isn’t uniquely Zapffe-like or death-specific.


5. Bottom line

  • Yes (broadly):
    There is strong empirical support that humans use psychological mechanisms—meaning systems, self-esteem, distraction, and suppression—to cope with existential anxiety.
  • But (important):
    • Zapffe’s exact four categories are not empirically validated as a model
    • The closest scientific analogue (TMT) is partially supported but debated

If you want a sharper takeaway

Zapffe was philosophically prescient:
He intuited patterns that later psychology partly confirmed—but reframed and tested differently.


If you want, I can map each of Zapffe’s four mechanisms to specific modern psychological constructs in more detail (it gets surprisingly precise).

do this

Great—this is where Zapffe gets surprisingly “modern” when translated into psychology.

Below is a tight mapping from each of Zapffe’s four mechanisms to well-defined, empirically studied constructs, along with what evidence says about each.


1. Isolation → Suppression, denial, and defensive avoidance

Zapffe’s idea

You push disturbing thoughts (especially about death/meaninglessness) out of awareness.

Modern psychological equivalents

  • Thought suppression (e.g., trying not to think about something)
  • Experiential avoidance (from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy)
  • Proximal defenses in Terror Management Theory
  • Denial (classic defense mechanism in psychoanalytic theory)

Evidence

  • People actively suppress death-related thoughts after they’re triggered
  • This suppression is often temporary—those thoughts rebound later (the “white bear” effect)
  • In TMT, after mortality reminders, people:
    • first suppress death thoughts (consciously)
    • then shift to deeper belief-based defenses

Interpretation

Zapffe’s “isolation” maps very cleanly onto well-established cognitive control processes.

๐Ÿ‘‰ This is one of the strongest empirical matches.


2. Anchoring → Meaning systems, identity, and worldview defense

Zapffe’s idea

You attach yourself to stable structures of meaning:

  • religion
  • nation
  • morality
  • life purpose

Modern equivalents

  • Cultural worldviews (Terror Management Theory)
  • Meaning-making systems (existential psychology)
  • Identity fusion / social identity theory
  • Self-esteem as a buffer
  • Symbolic immortality (e.g., legacy, values)

Evidence

This is the most heavily supported category:

  • Mortality reminders → stronger defense of:
    • religion
    • political beliefs
    • cultural norms
  • Increased ingroup favoritism / outgroup hostility
  • Boosting self-esteem reduces death anxiety

Interpretation

Zapffe’s anchoring = the central pillar of modern existential psychology.

๐Ÿ‘‰ This is the best-supported mechanism overall.


3. Distraction → Attentional avoidance and behavioral engagement

Zapffe’s idea

You keep yourself busy, entertained, or preoccupied to avoid existential reflection.

Modern equivalents

  • Attentional deployment (emotion regulation theory)
  • Cognitive load / distraction paradigms
  • Behavioral activation (in a neutral sense)
  • Hedonic consumption / media use as avoidance
  • Proximal defenses (TMT again)

Evidence

  • People shift attention away from existential threats automatically
  • Distraction reduces conscious anxiety in the short term
  • High cognitive load → fewer death-related thoughts
  • Modern research on:
    • smartphone use
    • constant stimulation
      supports chronic distraction as avoidance

Interpretation

Zapffe anticipated something like the “attention economy as existential anesthesia.”

๐Ÿ‘‰ Empirically supported, but:

  • mostly short-term regulation, not deep resolution

4. Sublimation → Meaning-making, creativity, and symbolic transformation

Zapffe’s idea

You transform existential anxiety into:

  • art
  • philosophy
  • creativity

Modern equivalents

  • Sublimation (Freudian defense, still used conceptually)
  • Meaning-making / post-traumatic growth
  • Creative expression as regulation
  • Symbolic immortality projects
  • Eudaimonic well-being (purpose-driven fulfillment)

Evidence

This one is real but more diffuse:

  • Creativity is often linked to:
    • existential reflection
    • mortality awareness
  • People reminded of death sometimes:
    • produce more meaningful narratives
    • pursue legacy-oriented goals
  • Art and storytelling help integrate difficult truths

BUT:

  • Hard to measure cleanly
  • Less experimentally tight than TMT findings

Interpretation

Zapffe’s “sublimation” corresponds to higher-order meaning transformation, not just defense.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Supported, but less precise and harder to test.


Putting it all together

Here’s the clean synthesis:

ZapffeModern constructStrength of evidence
IsolationSuppression / avoidanceStrong
AnchoringWorldviews / self-esteemVery strong
DistractionAttention regulationModerate–strong
SublimationMeaning-making / creativityModerate

The deeper insight (this is the interesting part)

Modern psychology suggests these mechanisms operate in layers, not separately:

  1. Immediate reaction
    → suppression + distraction (Zapffe: isolation, distraction)
  2. Secondary defense
    → worldview + identity reinforcement (Zapffe: anchoring)
  3. Higher integration (optional)
    → meaning-making, creativity (Zapffe: sublimation)

This layered model is basically Terror Management Theory + existential psychology combined.


Final takeaway

Zapffe wasn’t empirically right in a strict sense—but he was structurally right:

  • He identified real psychological patterns
  • Modern science:
    • confirms their existence
    • reorganizes them into testable systems
    • questions whether they’re uniquely about death

If you want, I can go one step further and show where Zapffe might actually be wrong (there are a few important ways modern psychology pushes back on his pessimism).

ok

Good—because this is where things get interesting: modern psychology both supports Zapffe’s mechanisms and challenges his pessimistic conclusions.

Here are the main ways he’s likely wrong or incomplete from today’s perspective.


1. He treats these mechanisms as purely defensive (they’re not)

Zapffe’s view

Anchoring, distraction, etc. are basically illusions or coping tricks to avoid unbearable truth.

What psychology finds

Many of these processes are not just defensive—they’re constitutive of normal, healthy functioning.

  • Meaning-making isn’t just a shield → it’s how humans organize reality
  • Identity and values aren’t distortions → they’re necessary cognitive structures
  • Even perception itself is “filtered” by meaning

Key idea

Modern cognitive science suggests:

You can’t “remove” these mechanisms and still function normally.

Implication

Zapffe assumes there’s a more “truthful” baseline without them—but psychology suggests that baseline may not exist.


2. Awareness of death doesn’t just produce anxiety

Zapffe’s view

Existential awareness → overwhelming dread → need for coping mechanisms.

Evidence shows a more mixed picture

Research in existential and positive psychology shows:

  • Mortality awareness can increase:
    • appreciation of life
    • prosocial behavior
    • intrinsic motivation
  • This is sometimes called “mortality salience growth effects”

Related work (e.g., Irvin Yalom):

  • Confronting death can lead to:
    • more authentic living
    • clearer priorities

Implication

Existential awareness isn’t just something we escape from—it can be something we use constructively.


3. Suppression and distraction aren’t the only options

Zapffe’s model

You either:

  • suppress (isolation)
  • distract
  • anchor
  • sublimate

What’s missing

Modern therapies show another path:

  • Acceptance instead of avoidance
  • Cognitive defusion (seeing thoughts without being controlled by them)
  • Mindfulness (non-reactive awareness)

From Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT):

  • You don’t need to suppress existential thoughts
  • You can coexist with them without distress dominating

Implication

Zapffe assumes:

Awareness → must be defended against

Modern psychology says:

Awareness → can be integrated without defense


4. His view is overly individual and ignores social regulation

Zapffe focuses on internal coping, but:

  • Humans regulate anxiety collectively
  • Culture is not just “anchoring”—it’s:
    • coordination
    • shared meaning
    • emotional co-regulation

Theories like:

  • Social baseline theory
  • Attachment theory

show that:

  • Connection reduces existential anxiety directly, not just symbolically

Implication

Meaning isn’t just a “psychological trick”—it’s partly interpersonal reality.


5. Terror Management Theory itself is debated

Even the closest empirical support (TMT) has issues:

  • Some findings don’t reliably replicate
  • Effects may reflect:
    • uncertainty
    • loss of control
    • general threat—not specifically death

So even if Zapffe anticipated TMT:

  • TMT is not a settled foundation

6. The biggest philosophical challenge: “illusion vs function”

This is the deepest disagreement.

Zapffe implicitly assumes:

  • There is a truth about existence (bleak, meaningless)
  • Coping mechanisms distort that truth

Modern perspective (roughly):

  • The brain evolved for function, not truth
  • Meaning may not be:
    • true or false
    • but adaptive and necessary

This aligns with views from thinkers like Friedrich Nietzsche:

  • Illusions (or “interpretations”) can be life-enhancing rather than deceptive

Final synthesis

Where Zapffe was right

  • Humans use:
    • suppression
    • distraction
    • meaning systems
    • creative transformation
  • These map well onto real psychological processes

Where he likely goes too far

  • He treats them as:
    • merely defensive
    • fundamentally deceptive
    • necessary because truth is unbearable

Modern view

  • These processes are:
    • partly defensive
    • but also generative, necessary, and sometimes truth-creating

The cleanest way to put it

Zapffe saw coping mechanisms as:

ways to avoid reality

Modern psychology sees them as:

ways to construct a livable reality


If you want, we can go even deeper into whether Zapffe’s core pessimism (that consciousness is a tragic evolutionary mistake) holds up scientifically—that’s a whole different level of debate.

ok

Alright—let’s go straight at Zapffe’s core claim:

Human consciousness is an evolutionary “overdevelopment” that makes life inherently tragic.

Does science support that?

Short answer: not really—but parts of it remain philosophically serious.


1. Evolution doesn’t support “maladaptive consciousness”

Zapffe’s assumption

If consciousness causes existential suffering, it must be a kind of evolutionary mistake.

What evolutionary theory actually says

Traits don’t need to be perfect—they just need to be good enough to reproduce.

Human-level cognition likely evolved because it enabled:

  • Long-term planning
  • Social coordination
  • Language and culture
  • Tool use and environmental control

All of these massively increase survival.

Key point

Even if consciousness causes anxiety, it can still be net adaptive.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Evolution tolerates costs if benefits outweigh them.


2. The “byproduct” version (closest to Zapffe being right)

There is a more charitable scientific version of his idea:

Existential awareness may be an unintended side-effect of useful cognitive abilities.

For example:

  • Self-awareness + future simulation → awareness of death
  • Pattern-seeking → search for meaning
  • Social cognition → concern with legacy and judgment

This aligns with views in evolutionary psychology:

  • Minds are not designed for “truth,” but for fitness-enhancing representations

Interpretation

Zapffe may be right that:

  • existential dread is not “selected for”
  • but rather a spillover effect

๐Ÿ‘‰ This is the strongest scientific foothold for his pessimism.


3. But: most people are not constantly in existential despair

If Zapffe were fully right, we’d expect:

  • widespread, constant psychological breakdown
  • inability to function without extreme denial

Instead, we observe:

  • Most people report moderate to high life satisfaction
  • People naturally:
    • find meaning
    • form relationships
    • pursue goals

Even across cultures.

What this suggests

Humans are not:

barely coping with unbearable awareness

They are more like:

well-adapted to regulate it


4. The brain actively regulates existential anxiety

Modern psychology shows:

  • Threat systems (amygdala, etc.) are balanced by:
    • meaning systems
    • social bonding
    • reward circuits

This creates a kind of homeostasis:

  • existential thoughts arise
  • regulatory systems dampen them

Not perfectly—but reliably.

Implication

Consciousness isn’t just a “problem generator”
→ it comes with built-in regulation mechanisms


5. Consciousness enables positive experiences Zapffe underplays

Zapffe focuses on dread, but consciousness also enables:

  • Awe
  • Love
  • Curiosity
  • Moral commitment
  • Aesthetic experience

From a biological perspective:

  • These are not illusions in a trivial sense
  • They are real motivational states with adaptive value

Critical point

Zapffe’s argument is asymmetrical:

  • emphasizes suffering from awareness
  • downplays value created by awareness

6. Modern alternatives to “cosmic pessimism”

Several frameworks reinterpret the same facts differently:

Existential psychology (e.g., Irvin Yalom)

  • Death awareness → can deepen life, not negate it

Meaning-centered theories

  • Meaning is not discovered but constructed
  • That doesn’t make it invalid

Predictive processing / cognitive science

  • The brain is a meaning-generating system
  • “Raw reality” without interpretation may be unusable

7. The strongest remaining version of Zapffe

If you strip away the overreach, you get a more defensible claim:

Humans uniquely understand their own finitude, and this creates a permanent tension that requires ongoing psychological management.

This is actually quite consistent with:

  • Terror Management Theory
  • Existential therapy
  • Clinical observations

So the refined version is:

  • ❌ Not: “consciousness is a mistake”
  • ✔️ More like: “consciousness introduces a chronic problem we must regulate”

Final verdict

What science supports

  • Humans:
    • are aware of death
    • experience existential anxiety
    • use psychological systems to manage it

What it does NOT support

  • That consciousness is:
    • fundamentally maladaptive
    • unbearable without illusion
    • an evolutionary error

The cleanest conclusion

Zapffe got one thing deeply right:

Human life involves managing the consequences of self-awareness.

But he likely got this wrong:

That this makes life objectively tragic or not worth sustaining.


If you want to push this further, we can examine the hardest question underneath all of this:

Even if meaning is constructed, does that make it “fake”?
That’s where philosophy and psychology really collide.

Monday, 23 March 2026

Yes—Primo Levi did use the idea often translated as “moral inversion” (though he didn’t always present it as a single fixed term). The concept appears most clearly in his reflections on life in Nazi concentration camps, especially in The Drowned and the Saved.

What Levi meant by “moral inversion”

Levi used this idea to describe how the ะปะฐะณะตั€ (camp system) systematically reversed normal moral values:

  • Good became dangerous: Kindness, solidarity, or honesty could put a prisoner at risk.
  • Bad became necessary: Selfishness, deception, or even collaboration could become essential for survival.
  • Victims were morally compromised: Prisoners were often forced into situations where they had to harm others or make ethically troubling choices just to live.

The “Grey Zone”

Levi connects this closely with his famous concept of the “grey zone”:

  • The camp was not simply divided into innocent victims and evil perpetrators.
  • Instead, there was a blurred moral space where prisoners might become functionaries (kapos, clerks, etc.), gaining privileges while participating in the system.
  • This created a disturbing reality where the oppressed could be partially implicated in oppression.

Why this mattered to Levi

Levi was very careful about judgment. His point was not to excuse wrongdoing, but to insist on understanding the extreme conditions:

  • The Nazi system was designed to corrupt moral frameworks themselves.
  • Outsiders, he argued, should be cautious about judging those who lived through it.
  • Moral inversion shows how totalitarian systems can dismantle ordinary ethical categories.

A simple way to think about it

In normal life:

Helping others = good
Betraying others = bad

In the camps (under “moral inversion”):

Helping others could get you killed
Betraying others could keep you alive


If you want, I can point you to specific passages where Levi describes this most directly, or compare his idea to similar concepts in thinkers like Hannah Arendt.

 You’re raising a serious philosophical objection, and it’s one that actually does appear—implicitly or explicitly—in parts of the scholarl...