Yes, the alcoholic will find a solution to buy the drinks sooner or later — javi2541997
Well if nothing we feel is genuine then why bother living? — Darkneos
Well, that's why you drive an hour to the nearest city... — Moliere
When I am an alcoholic, if you will not sell me your finest ethanol, I will have to go to the hardware store and buy meths. No tax on meths! — unenlightened
How can you help me, addicted as you are to your respectability? — unenlightened
This is more like denying reality though. You don't genuinely feel anything so those emotions are more or less a lie. — Darkneos
Quiet contemplation can help us experience our negative emotions without resistance. If we allow ourselves to feel our grief, sadness, anger, shame, or guilt fully and without trying to avoid them, they lose their power over us. — T Clark
When in regular meditation practice I notice being generally more sentimental. Hearing a touching story, for instance, makes eyes water when ordinarily they would not. That sort of thing. — praxis
Actually you tend to feel things more deeply because you’re more attuned to bodily sensations than wrapped up in what Buddhists call ‘monkey mind’. — praxis
Meditation may offer a "spaciousness" where there's more room to not react mindlessly. — praxis
Are we essentially just brainwashed by society and nothing more than puppets in our lives or is there more than that? — Darkneos
But if you are being affected or influenced by something else then it's not genuine, you're being controlled. — Darkneos
What's the meaning or purpose in doing anything at all? — niki wonoto
You will never know if you do not try. — I like sushi
However, this doesn't imply that democratic governance must "always fail" — javra
The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St. George to kill the dragon. — 180 Proof
That's his prize. — L'éléphant
But notice that populism (not to be mixed with something being popular) is confrontational and adverserial: it's us, the ordinary people, against them. Be they the leaders, the elite, the rich or some ethnic minority that is seen to dominate. — ssu
Few countries have been able to transform from a monarchy to a democracy (usually becoming constitutional monarchies) without any violence — ssu
I think this is why generally speaking we favour literature as the influencer of film and not the other way around. — Benj96
A third one doesn't come to mind now, hence it's usual that a political movement that drives for political change by using dictatorial powers usually will end up with one individual as a dictator. — ssu
in democracies people aren't always jubilantly happy about their elected leaders and there simply always is an opposition. — ssu
It's not that our wills are being thwarted by greedy evil doers, it's that we naturally gravitate toward hierarchy — frank
Over the past couple of centuriess too this appears to be a rather weird concern of many … the ‘goal’ or ‘target’. — I like sushi
You might argue that every society has it's pigs leading us, but that's not the case. — ssu
The pigs can act and behave quite differently. In a perfect society, we will feel that our pigs are incompetent in many things, but somewhat OK. Yet they aren't thieves and murderers. In a democracy, it doesn't get better than that. — ssu
It doesn’t have the burdens of reasons, that is. — schopenhauer1
This is bullshit because you smuggled in the value of "counterproductive" — schopenhauer1
That's quite possible, and it's also possible that we can never agree on what we should be doing, just as you must have meant something by "productive dialogue" that I did not understand .there is no objective "productive" that means "this is what I should be doing" — schopenhauer1
You are making a narrative a statement of obvious truth, which it isn't. — schopenhauer1
Right, you aren't getting it. — schopenhauer1
I think entertainment serves a great purpose in that it is an outlet for musings that may/or may not be temptations for action otherwise. — Benj96
So my point was the extra burden of the extra effort for motivation. — schopenhauer1
We provide narratives and reasons to ourselves for why we start, continue, or finish a project or task. — schopenhauer1
We may have a tendency to do things, but at all times, we are judging based on standards, values, ideas of what we think is good or preferable. — schopenhauer1
Often we default to routine as a justification, — schopenhauer1
Every time I bring this idea up, it is like there is a bug in this forum where no member quite understands what I am getting at but wants to debate animal cognition, — schopenhauer1
losing site of the focus, and throwing up red herrings or getting lost in non-essential tangents rather than productive dialogue on our existential situation.
I'm sorry if I've upset you — MojaveMan
I'm saying it may not be sane to seek happiness and possessions, etc. if it will all get taken in an instant as you trip going up the stairs. — MojaveMan
Why does the human want to live a happy life instead of a miserable one if they lead to the same end? — MojaveMan
But if they had lived hopelessly painful lives they would have always been ready. — MojaveMan
You "wake up" and get out of bed. You decide to go to the bathroom. Perhaps this is habit/routine, though. It is just something you do because you have done it. — schopenhauer1
You broke the routine. You recognized it and did something else. — schopenhauer1
You brush your teeth out of habit/routine — schopenhauer1
when someone calls your name from the bedroom. You instantly lookback — schopenhauer1
But of course, you can do anything you want. — schopenhauer1
In fact there seems to be almost no decision to be made, one is doing it). — schopenhauer1
is it moral to cross that boundary intentionally, or to be entertained by real life conflict? — Benj96
What I think one can more successfully fear is the loss of the known, — unenlightened
