Depends. Is the better option to have higher social status (that's mostly what that job is) and join the insane asylum when you're 50 because of too much stress?And my original point still stands; these people prefer to have this £80,000 a year job with its higher tax than the £12,000 a year job with its lower tax, so even though it might not be fair, it's still the better option. — Michael
Right. Yes you are correct, I just tried it. I have no idea what error I did when I calculated the first time. Either way, I've just assumed they had to pay £36,000 (just tuition fees) in loan repayments and they'd make up the remaining 6K/year working part-time or over the summers.Well, you actually said "from a meagre paying wage job", but even then, if you're earning £28,000 then it'd take 65 years to pay back £60,000 (not including interest), as it's 9% of income over £17,775, so £920.25 a year. — Michael
Right, but it shouldn't be the gov's job to punish people who haven't done anything illegal.I don't think it's the government's job to reward people. Its job is to provide necessary services to the country, which at the very minimum is keeping everyone alive, healthy, and safe. — Michael
No, I'm saying that people who provide disproportionately - for whatever reason - should have greater decision power in the changes that are going to be made.That's not how democracies work. Or are you suggesting that oligarchies are a fairer form of governance? — Michael
Sure but many rich people wouldn't rely on many of the public services anyway - say ambulances, hospitals, waste removal from the list you've provided.You mean aside from the armed forces, the police, a judiciary system, the fire service, the ambulance service, hospitals, a central bank, waste removal, roads, etc.? — Michael
I agree, obviously.(Not to mention that private police services and militaries is a recipe for disaster). — Michael
Yes, but when you do this, your country suffers significantly because they lose all potential taxes from you (apart from stuff that's unavoidable such as all the taxes involved with salaries/employment). They may as well settle on mutually favorable terms, then at least they get some of the taxes.I don't think anybody is holding you hostage to your home country. You're free to move to the Cayman Islands if you like. — Michael
It will be paid for by increasing corporation tax and income tax for people earning over £80,000. So that wouldn't be coming out of my tax money, and if it was, I would be okay with that, as I'd be happy enough to be on a salary of £80,000 or more. I'd have a lot more left over after tax than what I currently make. — Sapientia
Yeah, that commutes to ~£60,000 with the current tuition of £9,000 (9K*4+6K*4). As for the years I cited best case scenarios (starting with a very good job at £25,000-£28,000, and growing). My point is even 6-8 years is terrible for the value you get out of it.I spent ~£27,000. That was back when tuition was £3,000 a year (plus £6,000 maintenance). — Michael
The government doesn't reward the rich well enough. If I'm a billionaire, I have no problem paying for education a large amount of money. But that means I should have disproportionate rights in absolutely controlling how that education gets implemented (afterall, it's my money!). Not some dumb politician to take my money and do stupid things with it. I should have control over what happens to that money. If that happened, then rich people, at least many of them, would be interested to pay their fair shares of taxes. But at the moment, there's no benefits to paying your taxes. You're better off taking that money away to a fiscal paradise.The rich (or some of them, rathe) complain about a having to pay a disproportionate amount of tax, but given that almost everyone would prefer to earn £80,000 and pay 50% tax than earn £20,000 and pay no tax, it's hard to empathise. — Michael
That "substantially" doesn't mean much. It's the difference between $20K and $60-80K/yr (and even with a degree it takes 10s of years to reach that level) with the stipulation that people who earn bigger salaries are often required to travel more, attend more expensive events, live in more expensive places (close to the job), etc. In real cash flow terms, it doesn't end up being a big difference. They live at slightly higher standards of living, but because their bigger wage implies bigger costs, they are still a few pay-checks from starvation.None of this changes, however, that holders of a university degree earn substantially more over their lifetimes than those who don't hold such a degree (again, at least in the U.S.) — Arkady
Well I, for example, wouldn't look at that as a plus necessarily. It's not that hard to gain admittance to even great universities if that's your only goal in today's age. I know some people who graduated from top universities who are utter idiots. Their degree doesn't change that. As for "completing the course work" => most people cheat, even on that. It's amazing how much cheating is going on in Universities. Back when I attended, I never cheated, but I know many people who have, including paying to get others to do their course works.However, beyond the "politics" aspect, a university degree also sends a sort of honest signal to an employer, i.e. that this applicant was qualified to gain admittance into a university, was intelligent and disciplined enough to complete the course work, etc. — Arkady
I agree - degrees aren't what they used to be.Unfortunately, as the value of degrees becomes debased by things like affirmative action or legacy admissions, grade inflation, or lowered standards for academic coursework, this signal likely communicate less useful information to employers. — Arkady
That's a terrible idea. Do you imagine how many people will start going to university if tuition fees are abolished? Where will that money come from? Remember the costs are ~£9,000/student/year and at the moment, with the current tuition fees, there are 500,000 UK only students attending. That's £4.5 BILLION/year. And the number of students who attend will increase significantly if tuition is made 0. Say doubling (universities are smart - they will market, to get funds from the state, that's free and easy money, just for attracting more students). Are you prepared to pay £9 BILLION every year for free education out of your own tax money?Well, I'm with Labour who've pledged to abolish university tuition fees. — Sapientia
I hold an engineering degree. Learned almost 0 useful material. You go on a construction site afterwards, and don't understand anything. That's disgusting preparation, especially for someone who holds an Honours degree. It's all theory - but life is very different from theory. Academics like theory, because it's static, and it's easy to teach and control theory. It's much harder to teach real world.which probably greatly varies by major: engineering or accounting majors on average probably obtain more job-specific skills than those majoring in ethnic studies or Renaissance poetry — Arkady
Depends who the "employers" are. Large(r) companies want it not because they need it, but it's a way for the person in charge of hiring to guard his behind if you end up being a bad hire. He can then say to his managers - "oh well, I did my best, look at his education here, he seemed to have been the perfect candidate!". It's all about politics, not doing what's best for the business.Employers want that "piece of paper," — Arkady
I agree, but the careers for which it is worth it aren't many (doctors come to mind).I wouldn't make the blanket statement that it's definitely not worth it. — Sapientia
Yeah, I definitely think it's not worth the money. If I knew what I know today, and I had sufficient confidence back then to refuse the peer-pressure, I wouldn't go either.I never went to college or university, and I have no intention of going. — Sapientia
The question is mistaken - Heister is referring to university/college education - at least that's what our discussion in the other thread was about. I hope you didn't wait until college to learn basic maths :PYes, but barely. Basic maths, for example. — Sapientia
Yes, the poll is biased quite heavily towards people who are helped by their degrees, in my opinion. Also the question "does your current job utilise your education?" assumes (without saying) that education is only what you learn in school/college/university. But that's just simply a false assumption. Of course my work - for example - utilises education - and big time. But it's not the education I received in school. Heister seems to have built a Crooked and Lyin' Poll! >:OAlso, "No. And I don't care". The "Don't care" answer seems to me suggest that I don't care to answer the question. — Michael
I think the various forms of love have different compositions, but if we're speaking of charity/compassion then I'd say the fundamental characteristics are (1) a feeling of deep connection with others, (2) empathy, (3) good will, (4) openness. Obviously Eros or Love of God would also include desire, etc.It's an interesting question, and I don't have a ready answer to it. To reverse the question; what more could love be than good will? Desire, perhaps? If I desire something, do I necessarily have good will towards it? — John
That may be so, but I'm not sure it follows that "love is good will". Sure, without good will, love may be impossible, but does that mean that love is good will and nothing more?I find it impossible to think that if I love someone or something, that to the extent and at the times that I do love him, her or it, I do not, to the same extent, and at the same time, bear good will towards him — John
Who told you that? The corrupt educational system? Of course they did! That's the basic principle of selling anything, convincing your customer (read victim) that he needs your product or service - or otherwise he's fucked.That's the whole point of getting a degree................... — Heister Eggcart
Oh I am well acquainted with educational systems through out the world. They all say the same shit. I too believed that shit, until I had my degree, and I saw that it really was no big deal. I wasn't actually smarter or more qualified to do anything because of my degree. I really understood that despite getting my degree with honors, I was completely unqualified in truth for any real work. I really felt I didn't know much. And so I understood that, despite them praising you and shit - university is really useless.Pretty clear you've not been knee deep in the American educational system your whole life if you deny this. You're just wrong, bro. — Heister Eggcart
Oh, so you think I just magically landed in such a job, completely by accident right?Whoopty fucking do, Agu. Good luck getting a lot of jobs out there that require x, y, z certain tracks of education. Just because you've found yourself in a job without a degree that specifically pertains to that job, doesn't mean every and all degrees are pieces of paper that don't matter. — Heister Eggcart
>:O >:O >:O Unbelievable mate, you're complaining?! If I can start a business and make money in a fucking ex-communist country, full of corruption, bureaucracy and crooked laws which squash small businesses and help only big oligarchs, why can't you do it in the greatest capitalist country on Earth?! Just the mere fact you're American => that's instant credit worldwide.Because I need to pay the bills. You come on out to the rust belt here in the midwest and show me how eazy peazy it is to just start a business and make bank. — Heister Eggcart
All degrees are stupid, unless you run out of toilet paper, then any degree would be quite helpful! ;)I've been talking about pursuing a degree in Philosophy. I don't think I've ever heard a positive response. Some people (acquaintances, relatives, friends) just blurt out something like, "that's stupid", or "Philosophy is stupid", or "a degree in Philosophy is useless."
How would you respond? — anonymous66
But it does take a lot of will to keep crying and waiting you know. It's not like that's the easiest thing in the world either.Which means that, ya, crying and waiting is usually about all many can do. — Heister Eggcart
Let me be a necromancer for once and raise this thread from the dead.But your typical young philosophers, or typical people say on a philosophy forum, are not going to be sensitive to these sorts of deeper and more subtle connections between things, because they're still infatuated with Hume. And so they're more likely to play word games with the categories rather than try to explain, or even wonder, why these connections might hold. Hume's world-view leads only to logic-chopping and absolutely nothing else, and is sort of a self-fulfilling prophecy in that once you assume everything is totally disparate from everything else, there's literally nothing to say about anything. — The Great Whatever
*takes hat off* :) Yes, I respect you. You have your principles - not the same as mine, but at least you have the integrity of sticking to them - which is great!I think I did that. Though probably much closer to the grave than you are (at 70+) I haven't ceased trying to achieve, and be an upstanding character. — Bitter Crank
Heh - I don't take work to be drudgery. It's rewarding doing something useful for others - including making music for that matter. I haven't said that making music in the street is better or worse than assembling parts in a manufacturing plant on the conveyor belt for example.But what is better? joyful music in the summer or drudgery all the way to the grave? — Bitter Crank
Yes, but I actually disagree with that part. There are some things - the spiritual things - which are not meaningless. Doing great work is a spiritual undertaking of benefiting your fellow men - that's something to be proud of, that not even death can take away (the fact you've done good).The same thing can be said for everything that humans are or might be. "Meaningless! Meaningless!" says the Teacher. "Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless." Ecclesiastes. — Bitter Crank
Why is a degree "supposed to land you a job"? Why do you think that?I'm saying is that I should not "start" at those sorts of jobs after getting a degree which is supposed to land me a job that isn't burger flipping or trash collecting. — Heister Eggcart
Not true. I work in web development, database management & recently online advertising - I have no degree in any of them. Completely self taught. I hold a degree in civil engineering - so yeah. People are misguidedly obsessed with degrees - that's why they get stuck at certain levels in society and never move beyond. A degree is a fucking piece of paper - means very little. I've probably seen more incapable people with degrees than without :Pone must still get an education in order to have any reasonable hope of getting a job in the field that they'd like to work in. — Heister Eggcart
Well, why not?Uh, no. — Heister Eggcart
No, we don't use logic to determine what's real at all. Logic doesn't tell us ANYTHING about what's real and what's not real. Logic helps us relate different facts of existence. It doesn't tell you if there's a pink elephant in your back garden right now, or if unicorns exist somewhere in the Universe. All knowledge comes from the senses, and is merely processed with logic. Is death real? Yes, at least in an ordinary sense, I've witnessed it, and I know it's real.But is death real? We use logic to determine what's real and fearlessness is the logical stance in the face of the uncertainty of death. You can doubt me and my logic all you want, it doesn't make me not right. — Noblosh
Your goal is whatever you choose. If you choose to be a righteous man, then your goal becomes your duty.But "Doing your duty." is still not a goal in itself.
Duty implies obligation, not desire. — Noblosh
Words. Let's see you do that.With indifference. If it's coming anyway, there's no point in our encounter. — Noblosh
Logical, but is it also real?! Logic alone does not move men. Logic alone does not dispel fear, nor does it give you the courage to live. Logic alone is vacuous and empty of any and all meaning - it is a sheer nothing. So no, I don't believe - if I am to take you at your word - that you are fearless because of logic. There are deeper and more powerful emotional reasons why you are fearless, if indeed you are.Death is just an event, not a combatant. Again, there's no use in fearing that which can not be prevented, therefore in the face of death, I'm fearless, it's only logical. — Noblosh
Yes, if you add assumptions that I made no mention of, sure.Free from responsibility you mean. After all, the one whose sole purpose is to work is not concerned with the morality of it at all because work itself is absolute. — Noblosh
Pff, give me a break with these childhood posts. I have over 4000 posts here (and who knows how many thousands at the previous forum) - I'm well aware of what's a fallacy and what's not.I'm sorry but this is the no true scotsman fallacy. — Noblosh
Right, and colonising space, exploiting stars, etc. isn't mythological >:OI think we're beyond mythological metaphors. Sure, humans may colonize space, exploit the stars, do great things and become godlike but that wouldn't make them any more godly. I'll definitely be myself. — Noblosh
Someone who loved you, even if you were a worm? There's no point hating a worm, but there is a point in loving a worm (or any other creature). There is an asymmetry there.So... Who the heaven would waste their time to gift us? You're not being consistent. — Noblosh
No, I don't condemn desire. I condemn desire for that which is evil. I don't understand why you've made the assumption I condemn desire.That's not a goal, goal implies ambition and ambition implies desire which you condemn. — Noblosh
Yes maybe for two lovers, but building a family takes more than just love. It takes discipline and commitment as well, combined with singularity of purpose. Hence the two people who form a family cannot be two "independent" people. No they must be dependent - and whatever forms that dependency is valuable, whether it is love, need, religion, purpose. Having a leader amongst the two, and a follower, also helps. One flesh cannot have two heads.It is not competition but rather a state of positive growth when two loving people mature together and the improvement is to improve our minds, reason and our morality. — TimeLine
Not necessarily. It may be possible, but it depends on the circumstances and the people what's right.who is independent — TimeLine
Okay, agreed.morally conscious — TimeLine
Yes, but having a family is much more than sharing your life and continuously improving - that's sufficient for lovers, not for husband and wife.you share your life and continuously improve. — TimeLine
Agreed, deception is a no-no.or someone who is evil or deceptive. — TimeLine
With a social conformist you are right. But with "someone mindless who completely relies on you and does what you tell him/her" you are dead wrong. Unity of purpose is extremely important to success. That "mindless" person has saving virtues - humility and devotion - and is to be preferred over the independent mindful person who always wants to go their own way.It would be impossible to do this with a conformist, or someone mindless who completely relies on you and does what you tell him/her — TimeLine
And yes, actually the last time I went to the bank, I had to do the bank teller's job for him. That's the kind of service I usually get. I usually see incapable people everywhere - people who don't give a fuck about their work, and just want a damn salary at the end of the month. If they themselves despise their work so much, why should anyone give a fuck about it?Have you been to the bank recently?... (hint: bank tellers aren't exactly jonsing for CEO positions). — Noble Dust
No, not in the beginning at least. People at that level still take prestige though - they work at JPM while their friends work at McD's - in their local environment, they see themselves as kings.Have you been to the bank recently?... (hint: bank tellers aren't exactly jonsing for CEO positions). — Noble Dust
No, that is just impossible. Not even death can prohibit a man from doing his duty. It's just he himself who can do that.So rising through the ranks would never lead to a position that would prohibit a "man" from doing his duty? — Noble Dust
As much as possible for others and for the world - yes.So, doing a "man's" duty is to "do as much as possible"? Is that it? — Noble Dust
I don't have time to check through all those links at the moment, if you could provide me a summary, like, workaholism leads to these problems:Here's a few links at random:
http://newyorkbehavioralhealth.com/workaholism
http://www.workaholics-anonymous.org/
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/22/your-money/getting-workaholics-to-stop-and-recharge.html
http://nyhre.org/events/a-bio-psychosocial-perspective-on-addiction-from-heroin-to-workaholism-by-dr-gabor-mate/
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/16/nyc-workaholism-map_n_5336981.html — Noble Dust
So you'd rather have me fake that it is my problem? You'd rather have me lie to your face, and tell you that I can give you a sense of self-worth, so that you'll forever remain stuck and bound to me, like a slave and a sheep? Is that it then? Would you rather have me look at you as a child, who has no chance to rise up by himself - who is weak and helpless - maybe just what you see when you look in the mirror. But I don't - because I know there's more to you.Oh, so it's not your problem? Idiot. You have no sense of empathy. What I meant by that is that some people have no sense of self-worth, based on their life experiences, which ties back to the topic of this thread. I'm one such person; one such worm. Say that to my face. — Noble Dust
Being remembered is just the result of providing value to the world. The value lies in what you've done - remembrance is just a sign.No, I dispute the value of "being remembered". — Noble Dust
He would. Just that most people who choose to work there have other reasons.So the bank teller at Chase wouldn't be able to do a similarly upstanding job? — Noble Dust
Never. It is a man's duty to do as much as possible for the world and for his fellow men while alive and capable. Moving up can help with that. What's the goal? Doing your duty.then when exactly does the moving up become reprehensible? Once you start working at Chase, or what? What exactly is this goal of moving through the ranks? — Noble Dust
I agree. But their aspiration isn't to work. It's to drive expensive cars, and have lots of women around them.Once again...someone working for Chase (or more accurately), Wall Street, may have these aspirations. And that's not a good thing. — Noble Dust
How about you start telling me why workaholism is a problem then instead of beating around the bush and sending me to do research?But let me try to spell it out more succinctly: There is an ethos of workaholism in NYC. The impetus for this depends on many factors. That was my original argument here. Workaholism can be a problem; for instance, in a city like NYC. You can either dispute this claim by doing some research on workaholism in NYC, or assume that, as someone who lives here, I'm on to something. *shrug* I honestly don't even care — Noble Dust
That's his problem.No, but the worm may curse itself. — Noble Dust
Yes, what's the issue with it? You dispute the value of helping others, inspiring others, and doing your duty to God?Remembered...remembered...remembered... — Noble Dust
I referenced working at McD's in a positive light in terms of that being your start. You wouldn't be like other McD's workers - you would actually care about customers, put soul into serving them, try to speak with them, be nice, kind, bear with the lack of nobilities coming from your collegues - do great work for the sake of work. And then you'd go home, and study, work, learn. Sooner or later, you'd graduate McD's.For instance, you recently referenced working for McDonalds in a positive light. I could think of any number of reasons why working for McD's is morally reprehensible. — Noble Dust
Trust me - London isn't much different. I understand it. That's why I don't live in such cities.I would venture to guess you don't have much first hand experience in understanding this ethos. — Noble Dust
No, I don't think their corporate "greed" is what's reprehensible. What's reprehensible is that you're there just for status. Not to work. Not to do a great job. You're there for the parties and for the sniffing of cocaine and the driving of expensive cars. That's who you sold your life to - not to work.Of course I agree with you that working for Chase, or some such, is morally reprehensible. — Noble Dust
No. There's never too much work. Work sets man free.Do you not consider workaholism a problem? — Noble Dust
The industry they work in is irrelevant. It's the hypocrisy of working for status, fast cars, women, etc. that is in question.What about those who work in the publishing industry (allowing you to read the books you read), or the art world (setting the bar on what is and isn't art, as ridiculous as it is?) I'm saying this as someone who lives here, and has my own harsh criticisms of the ethos here. — Noble Dust
A curse - give me a break, us mortals are not worth cursing. Who the hell would waste their time to curse us? Would you curse ants, worms and dust?Sometimes life seems a gift, other times, it seems a curse. — Noble Dust
People who help others are remembered. People who inspire others are remembered. People who render service unto the world, and do their duty to God - they are remembered. People who care just about themselves and enjoying life - they are not remembered - they send themselves straight to the fires of hell.Furthermore, you began by using language of "remembered by", and now you switch to begging the question of "throwing life away". So it seems you're equating the value of life with being "remembered". This is what I have issue with. — Noble Dust
No my friend, it wasn't workaholism that destroyed them. It was their lust, greed, shamelessness and sloth - you were right in saying that those who "work a lot" there also "party a lot". It's the partying that killed them. The truth is - they've never worked. Not real work. It's always been fake work, for a J.P. Morgan or some shit. Useless work. Wasting time in an office. 50% of "work-time" is wasted by most people. It's, as I said before, all smoke and mirrors. Drop the smoke and mirrors.Not because of laziness: because of the prevailing environment of workaholism. — Noble Dust
So you'd rather throw away your life? No gratitude at all, for having been gifted with it.I'd rather not be remembered at all. The entire premise here is as empty as the materialism you critique. — Noble Dust
What's the point of enjoying yourself BC, you'll end up in the same grave, and it will be as if the enjoyment never existed. Rather do something (or try to do something) you can be proud of, and be an upstanding character. That's all that can be asked of life.If Ludwig didn't enjoy himself while he was here, I see no need to follow suit. — Bitter Crank
I agree, but risk tolerance can be changed if you force yourself to undertake more risks.Some people are just more risk averse than others, and most people are more risk tolerant for one kind of risk than another. Some people will take great risk in athletics (climbing dangerous mountains) but are totally risk averse when it comes to money. — Bitter Crank
Well, based on my experience, people who work a lot, live a lot - and people who don't, don't live a lot. I remember reading Schopenhauer who said that life is movement - to live is to move, and act. Death follows suite after one ceases activity and lives in physical and mental sloth, because the body pulls back - it doesn't need to devote energy to the efficiency of its processes anymore, and thus it returns to dust.People like you excel first, achieve miracles, then get old and die. Of course, you haven't gotten old yet; time will tell whether you die first. — Bitter Crank
Nothing is necessary. But let's see - would you rather be remembered as an upstanding man who devoted himself to the betterment of mankind, who struggled and toiled each and every day for something greater than himself - or would you rather be remembered as the sloth who never rose up to the challenge, and whose sole achievement in life was casting a shadow over the earth? In the long run, one man will rise amongst the stars and live amongst the gods, and the other one will disappear through the gates of Hades. Who will you be? Death is coming anyway - how will you meet it? Maybe you can hear the footsteps - even now, approaching. It's coming - and you can't escape. Will it find you snuggled up in a corner, begging for mercy - or will it find you fighting to your last breath, determined through sheer will not to give death the victory of crushing your spirit?Basically, the work ethic capitalism is based upon. But what I don't understand is, what's necessary? Making a living? To what end? Staying alive? That's not an end in itself.
You may find meaning in diligence but I suspect that is precisely because others don't and so I find you blaming them ironical. — Noblosh
Along with laziness, drug use, and partying. I wonder why.inequality has been rising since the 70's or 80's — Question
First there's nothing wrong with working as a trash collector or a McDonalds burger flipper if that's where you have to start. What's all this pursuit of status and pride because of a fucking college degree?If I graduate college with a degree that can't land me a proper job, sure, I'll still have boundless opportunities to be a trash collector or a McDonalds burger flipper. But, y'know, FUCK that. I feel that if I'm educated to do x or y in field z, then I'm entitled to a job in that sector, not to work some piss shit job like I could have done without a degree beforehand. — Heister Eggcart
And obviously failing. Love isn't restricted to only one definition that will cover all its aspects. It seems to me that you are stuck with a theoretic rationalism which cannot see beyond itself.I'm still trying to get you to realize that "God is equivalent to Love" is a mistaken interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
>:O "We are not here to enjoy ourselves" - Ludwig WittgensteinThe fucking nerve of these lazy sons of bitches -- wanting to enjoy life. Take them out and shoot them! — Bitter Crank
That may be true, but I've encountered many people to whom, for example, I presented an opportunity, and who have refused it because of the risk involved, instead preferring the safer, but less rewarding and easier path. I'm not sure if that's just because of fear, or because of laziness - but perhaps both. Lack of self-belief and self-esteem is a major cause.I would say many unsuccessful and unhappy people have lacked the knowledge (from an early age) to identify a bona fide opportunity. I blame ignorance of how the world works more than laziness. — Bitter Crank
Okay, but what about those people who are told - these are the skills you need, and this is how you can learn them - and who still don't stick with it? They are clearly either (1) afraid, or (2) lazy - or perhaps (3), they don't believe it's true - OR a combination of the three. Or perhaps they just don't want to sacrifice "fun" ;)If one is ignorant of what the required skills and knowledge are, they can't develop a plan to obtain them. Again, ignorance. — Bitter Crank
Common, people can learn by themselves. I don't think I've learned ANY of the practical skills I'm making use of these days except by myself. I lived in a very protective family environment, so everything I've learned afterwards, was achieved through my own self devoted study. And trust me -Reaching adulthood without these traits, without a foundation of skills and knowledge, and ignorance of how to identify a practical opportunity (one which can actually be exploited) leaves one pretty much screwed. — Bitter Crank
Yes, it's about time we get our rights, and get properly recognised!34% religious on a philosophy forum! :-O — jkop
Opportunities abound. Seriously. But many people are not willing to put in the effort, and go through the fear, anxiety, etc. required to take the opportunities. They also lack discipline, will, and intelligence.Are economics the problem--Too many people pursuing too few opportunities? — Bitter Crank
I feel people have no direction in life, and expect and desire at all costs to enjoy life. This attachment to the enjoyment of life, instead of to more objective goals - such as building a family, spiritual enlightenment, building a business, etc. - leads to chaos. The fake media also promotes a fake vision of life, and instills fake values into people - that's also a big problem. I think their desire to have fun and enjoy life is what ensures the destruction of most people. Survival comes at a cost - discipline, hard work, and intelligence. Failing time and time again, and trying again and again and again. Not once, or twice, or three times - but every day, 365 days a year, for years on years.Is life becoming too complicated for people to manage? Too many options, too many details? — Bitter Crank
Hmmm, okay, I have felt all three.No, I have never felt hatred, but certainly anger and indeed sadness but these emotions are derived from actions or inactions; — TimeLine
I disagree. I don't necessarily want my wife to be someone I admire. I'm looking for a few key character traits (religiosity, loyalty, compassion/kindness, humility, family-oriented), but those alone aren't sufficient to entail admiration. I generally admire people whose achievements put me in a state of awe - people like Aristotle, King Solomon, Alexander the Great, and so forth.Thus who we love must be someone we admire — TimeLine
No, I wouldn't desire to mirror my wife. Marrying someone like you is often a disaster. I'm too ambitious for example (in terms of everything I do pretty much) - if I married a woman who was equally ambitious, it would end in disaster. What did Alexander say - "there can only be one sun in the sky, and one Alexander on Earth".as someone that you would desire to mirror — TimeLine
Okay - obvious. So what? I don't really get your point. It seems to me to be some abstruse theoretical reasoning that doesn't do much to help us gain any insights into the subject matter...If you define "love" in one way, then define "love" in another way, then the two definitions contradict each other. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm not quite sure about that, it would depend on what love is. But it is clear that in order to love, you have to be a person, and in possession of both intellect (choosing the means) and will (desire).so, love is good will — John
I don't think that's true... I mean have you never felt hatred for someone you love? There are moments when such feelings appear - anger, hatred, etc. - but they are not lasting, love overcomes them. That's what is meant in the Bible by "Love never fails".If you feel hatred or indifference to someone you care about, such as a partner, you quite simply don't love them. — TimeLine
I don't follow this.But two distinct meanings of "love" does not allow for reconciliation between "God is Love" and "God is loving" because "love" refers to something different in each of these cases. So these two must remain contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Has philosophy impacted your view / interaction with the Scriptures in any way? For example has reading a particular philosopher / philosophy inclined you towards the Scriptures or got you interested in God?The scriptures are revelatory. No outside decision as to their reliability needs to be made – reading them ingenuously on their own terms inclines one toward belief. — The Great Whatever
