I take the opposite view. There are some people who are actively not worth listening to and should be avoided at all costs; they have nothing to teach. Of course, you could get tricky and say that they can teach you tolerance or patience - perhaps, but I prefer banishment. — Tom Storm
Eh, the entire cultural climate is ruled by this logic and is fairly poor because of that. Not everyone can, perhaps, can relate to this, but take anime gatekeepers for example. Sure, the original
FLCL series,
Serial Experiments Lain, and
xxxHolic are considerably better than kind of a lot of shows and it is kind of vexing for people in their twenties to only really ever want to talk about
Naruto, but there's also a certain set of absurdities that come with a pretense of aesthetic superiority. The cultural climate of anime fans is also afflicted by assumptions such as that, in order appreciate, let's say,
Ruroni Kenshin, you would have had to have also have read the magna, rather in spite of that it was serialized in
Shōnen Jump, which tends to streamline manga for animated production, or that, in order to appreciate
Mobile Suit Gundam SEED, a good enough show in its own right, you would have also have to had seen an extraordinarily lengthy set of other
Gundam series, potentially even having had to have built a model mech, which do make an appreciation of the art form less enjoyable to participate within. As much patience as it required to withhold judgement for this or that conspiracy theory during the Occupy, a generalized assumption that everyone ought to have a voice really did kind of provide for a better forum than most.
I sometimes thought that Sartre hinted at Daoism in some of his more cryptic utterances - I prefer this one:
"We have to deal with human reality as a being which is what it is not and which is not what it is.”
― Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness — Tom Storm
I could never tell as to whether Sartre was just talking into air or if I just didn't quite get
Being and Nothingness at moments similar, at least, to this. It becomes so much more perplexing when he makes statements like this with his particularly defined philosophical vocabulary. This, I think, is a good cryptic statement to express his philosophy of nothingness at the heart of being, but, there were definite times when it seemed as if he had made a litany of completely irreconcilable contradictions that, for me, at least, didn't really seem to approach some sort of higher truth
via his critical approach to the dialectic or whatever. I would find myself occasionally rapt and often losing focus while reading that text, though, and, so, probably only really absorbed what I paid good attention to, which kind of misses the general gist of it, as you kind of have to accept his entire methodology to really appreciate it.
Granted, I just think that negation delimits Ontology, and, so, in the Sartrean sense, is important for reflexive self-consciousness, but would place less emphasis on nothingness were I to write a seminal philosophical tract.