We know work is a negative because people want to reach the end goal of work, not be stuck in a state of work.
This is a non-sequitur. Your premise that people only do work to reach an end goal is true, but your conclusion is false. The anticipation of and active progress towards an end goal creates a positive affect, not a negative one.
You may find the completion of mathematics problems to be positive (which they are), but they are always proceeded by the negative feelings of not having them complete -- it's zero sum.
Using this example, yes, I want to solve the problem, but I enjoy the process of solving, just as I am happy once it is done. In fact, I am happier when I have a difficult problem to work on then when I don't.
You're not seeing how it follows because you're starting at the conclusion.
Before you even begin work, you experience negative affect which then inspires you to work. Something, in your eyes, needs to be worked on, meaning that you're in a negative affect state to being with (before you've made any "progress"), and thus you work to get out of it. You wouldn't feel the need to work if you were okay with things not requiring work -- you're in a state of negative affect before you even begin the work.
Also, progress is not assumed with work *and* it's not a constant throughout the work, so anticipation of progress/good results isn't always fulfilled with the irl reality. Sometimes, your hard work and efforts go completely unrewarded, thus this would be instances of pure negative affect. Sometimes, you will be between "progress" and feel like you're not making progress, despite working, and thus you're in a state of negative affect.
Do you enjoy it more when you are hungry? Do you enjoy it more when you are full?
Clearly, starving people feel far better when eating than someone who is full who is eating.
Therefore, the positive affect is built out of the negative affect that proceeded it.
Everything here is true, but it does not follow that the positive affect cannot be any greater than the negative affect.
I agree that positive affect can outweigh the negative affect, but current human biological life, overall, has the negatives outweighing the positives.
With human biology and life as it is, for all circumstances, there is negative affect that proceeds positive affect. Even at an equal value of 1 negative affect unit to 1 positive affect, this would be zero sum. However, people give more negative value to negative affect than they do positive value to positive affect (e.g. loss aversion), so it doesn't even end up being 1 to 1 zero sum because negative affect has more impact.
Also, your dinner still comes at the price of work to get/make it, so there is that negative affect involved, too.
While I acknowledge that many people are not satisfied with their job, many enjoy their work.
People don't ever "enjoy" their work. People may enjoy the progress they make during work and the completion of work itself.
Nobody works for the sake of work. People would be miserable if they worked for a long time and screwed everything up.
If dissatisfaction were the ideal state, then no one would be trying to escape it.
I never said that it was an ideal state, but trying to escape it is likely one of the fastest routes to a miserable life, whereas if you are able to find joy in striving towards the next goal, it is possible to live a happy life.
All humans try to escape dissatisfaction, so when you say that that's one of the fastest routes to a miserable life, you're actually making the case for antinatalism by inadvertently arguing that normal human behavior is one of the fastest routes to a miserable life.
There is no "joy" in striving to the next goal, either. There is joy in progress towards and completion of goals, but not in having a goal unfulfilled (i.e. "striving"). Existing in a state of being that has goals unfulfilled (i.e. "striving") produces negative affect.
Yes, work can produce positive affect, but it's built out of negative affect. You need the negative affect to escape in order for work to become satisfying.
I'm not sure what you mean by the negative affect "escaping."
Humans want to escape from negative affect. Being in a state of having unfulfilled goals produces negative affect. Therefore, humans attempt to escape this negative affect by completing those goals.
Furthermore, work isn't satisfying if you never had goals, and the negative affect that comes with that, to begin with.
This is quite silly when we could simply blast people with dopamine hits that don't require the negative affect from dissatisfaction beforehand.
How practical would that be? Speaking from experience: When you regularly receive an excessive amount of dopamine, you will begin to feel demotivated when it comes to actual work. Soon enough, all of that work begins to make you miserable. You wind up with three options: Continue to be miserable, stop doing the work and let your life collapse around you, or give up the dopamine hits. I chose the third option, and today I am a very a happy person.
Not practical at all, but it's a possible solution to a problem that most people realize doesn't exist.
If work is so bad that people would prefer to be put on dopamine blast after dopamine blast, then what does that say about work? I already know that people don't want to do work, but you're just confirming it more here.
Your whole argument is currently a massive cope that glorifies work whilst ignoring all its major pitfalls. If humans didn't exist in the first place, we wouldn't have to cope with the hardships of reality with dumb things like "work" just so we can make life not as bad.