Schadenfreude
Not concerned here with etymology per se. I have known of this word for quite some time. There's something troubling--dark--about this little thought adventure ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schadenfreude
and, telling it like it is ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCQGQ5qBQTA
Wikipedia notes:
"The Buddhist concept of mudita, "sympathetic joy" or "happiness in another's good fortune", is cited as an example of the opposite of schadenfreude."
Is it similar to the American expression, Misery loves company? Perhaps social comparison theory coming into play?
"Alternatively, envy, which is unhappiness in another's good fortune, could be considered the counterpart of schadenfreude." I once heard this distinction: Jealousy is wishing you also had the good fortune/talent/whatever. Envy is wishing that THEY did not have it, that their good fortune would be taken away. "The philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer mentioned Schadenfreude as the most evil sin of human feeling, saying famously 'To feel envy is human, to savor schadenfreude is devilish.'" And, "Brain-scanning studies show that schadenfreude is correlated with envy."
And this is interesting: "The internet slang term "lulz" (A variation of LOL) has acquired the connotation of fun or amusement at another person's expense, especially in regard to trolling behavior."
So that's the theory. Let's practice now ...
How about you? Any personal thoughts, impressions, reflections, feelings, experience with this? Have you felt Schadenfreude? Where does guilt fit in (guilt about feeling Schadenfreude)? If you compare yourself to someone (a competitor, colleague, rival) and derive some Schadenfreude seeing them falter or stumble or struggle, how far does it go ... Would you wish to see them totally fail, for example? or how would you feel if they came down with a dread disease and fail to survive it? If you have a disease or health problem, does it feel better to know that someone else also has the same condition, or that they have their own struggles with some other, different health problem? If so, is that how we as humans confirm/validate that we are, in fact, experiencing a "normal human experience" when we are ill with disease? You can extend this to almost anything in life: seeing people lose their fortunes, lose jobs, suffer mortgage default, and so on.
Schadenfreude pie: "... the whole schadenfreude metaphor — you really only want a small slice; too much of this pie and it’ll sit in the pit of your stomach like a rock of judgment, pulling you down. Small slice? Excellent. Big slice? You’ll regret it. Just like schadenfreude itself."
How to Make a SchadenfreudePie
http://whatever.scalzi.com/2006/09/2...denfreude-pie/
You may google Schadenfreude and find all sorts of things.
Not concerned here with etymology per se. I have known of this word for quite some time. There's something troubling--dark--about this little thought adventure ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schadenfreude
and, telling it like it is ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCQGQ5qBQTA
Wikipedia notes:
"The Buddhist concept of mudita, "sympathetic joy" or "happiness in another's good fortune", is cited as an example of the opposite of schadenfreude."
Is it similar to the American expression, Misery loves company? Perhaps social comparison theory coming into play?
"Alternatively, envy, which is unhappiness in another's good fortune, could be considered the counterpart of schadenfreude." I once heard this distinction: Jealousy is wishing you also had the good fortune/talent/whatever. Envy is wishing that THEY did not have it, that their good fortune would be taken away. "The philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer mentioned Schadenfreude as the most evil sin of human feeling, saying famously 'To feel envy is human, to savor schadenfreude is devilish.'" And, "Brain-scanning studies show that schadenfreude is correlated with envy."
And this is interesting: "The internet slang term "lulz" (A variation of LOL) has acquired the connotation of fun or amusement at another person's expense, especially in regard to trolling behavior."
So that's the theory. Let's practice now ...
How about you? Any personal thoughts, impressions, reflections, feelings, experience with this? Have you felt Schadenfreude? Where does guilt fit in (guilt about feeling Schadenfreude)? If you compare yourself to someone (a competitor, colleague, rival) and derive some Schadenfreude seeing them falter or stumble or struggle, how far does it go ... Would you wish to see them totally fail, for example? or how would you feel if they came down with a dread disease and fail to survive it? If you have a disease or health problem, does it feel better to know that someone else also has the same condition, or that they have their own struggles with some other, different health problem? If so, is that how we as humans confirm/validate that we are, in fact, experiencing a "normal human experience" when we are ill with disease? You can extend this to almost anything in life: seeing people lose their fortunes, lose jobs, suffer mortgage default, and so on.
Schadenfreude pie: "... the whole schadenfreude metaphor — you really only want a small slice; too much of this pie and it’ll sit in the pit of your stomach like a rock of judgment, pulling you down. Small slice? Excellent. Big slice? You’ll regret it. Just like schadenfreude itself."
How to Make a SchadenfreudePie
http://whatever.scalzi.com/2006/09/2...denfreude-pie/
You may google Schadenfreude and find all sorts of things.
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