
Philosopher's Zone Love, compassion and gloom: the contradictions of Arthur Schopenhauer
Nov 19, 2025
David Bather-Woods, an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Warwick University and author of a recent biography on Arthur Schopenhauer, dives into the complexities of the 19th-century philosopher. They explore Schopenhauer’s stark pessimism and its relevance today. Bather-Woods contrasts Schopenhauer's views on romantic love and desire with compassion as an ethical foundation. They also discuss his hard determinism, personal setbacks, curious relationships, and the balance between misanthropy and warmth in his character, revealing a more nuanced figure than often portrayed.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Life As Blind Striving
- Schopenhauer argues life is driven by a blind "will to life" that makes conscious striving necessarily painful.
- He concludes this creates an inherent pessimism where non-existence can be preferable to existence.
Desire Equals Painful Lack
- The will to life causes endless desire because wanting implies lack and painful motivation.
- Satisfaction is fleeting so conscious beings remain trapped in cycles of striving and suffering.
Determinism And Moral Responsibility
- Schopenhauer is a hard determinist: we can do what we will but cannot determine what we will.
- He still holds people feel responsible because we 'choose' to affirm or deny life at a deep level.







