I think we're losing signal here. What's a perfect wold to you? — Caldwell
I disagree. Rationalization is much a strategy to remedy a situation. "Has made peace with them" is not gonna cut it for this happiness -- this is not contentment, but acceptance when all else failed. — Caldwell
Everything becomes and recurs eternally_ escape is impossible.' — Jack Cummins
Of course no one says to accept a wretched condition -- if you find yourself in this situation, please do something to get out of it. Contentment requires work. Don't just accept your situation, work on it, until you can honestly tell yourself "I'm okay". — Caldwell
So you think that a positive emotion must entail a negative emotion?
This isn't rocket science (we are not dealing with moving masses). The reverse should be true in your scheme that terrible grief should lead to immense happiness, and joy should be followed by sadness. That isn't how my universe works. — Bitter Crank
Any movement towards the "positive" must have an equal movement back towards the "negative
— synthesis
Why? How? Where did this come from? — Bitter Crank
Yeah, but what about orgasm? Intense pleasure morphs into deep relaxation(depending on who you’re with, of course) and then maybe sleep. No necessary transition to sadness or letdown — Joshs
What to you, would be happiness. It wouldn't be anything you've experienced because then you'd know or at least be able to rationalize why not everything is so simple. — Outlander
So, sure -- one part of happiness is (privately) feeling good. And the other part is being productively and publicly engaged. — Bitter Crank
YES, but does happiness always result directly in sadness? — Joshs
I dunno some people have all the luck. — Outlander
I'm of a stoical disposition - IMO, stoicism is the route and recipe to true happiness. — Pantagruel
Your position essentially revolves around the question of definitions. — Pantagruel
What you call contentment I think is a mature understanding of happiness. — Pantagruel
Oh dear, yet another person who doesn't know what racism is. Gawd help us. — creativesoul
Oh dear, yet another white person that does not know what white privilege is, nor the benefits of acquiring such knowledge. So many people equate privilege to being wealthy. It's not about being wealthy. — creativesoul
Is this what you mean?
“Every questioning is a seeking. — Joshs
It appears to me that, in terms of temporal sequence, a certain aspect of nature has to acquire some kind of significance in and of itself and this significance can be in the cultural, social, physical, technological, epistemological, etc. spheres/domains before a question pertaining to it can make sense and questions have to make sense for them to be answered, right? — TheMadFool
My preliminary investigation suggests that time (when?) and space (where?) were conceived of by the human mind before when? and where? became meaningful. When? and where? would be meaningless without a frame of reference in which space and time didn't/doesn't exist. Likewise, it's my suspicion that without an established sense of personhood, free will, and responsibility, among other things, the question who? would be devoid of meaning. — TheMadFool
I would say that understanding of others needs to overcome the attempt to know what the other needs entirely, and keep an open mind, allowing for unique individuality. — Jack Cummins
...I would say that our approach to others is connected to that towards others. The link is that our feelings towards others' needs stems from our understanding of our own individual ones. — Jack Cummins
You can't have compassion for yourself? — frank
Empathy is what prevents indifference, the root cause of virtually all suffering man will ever face. — Outlander
For instance, location and time are crucial to living an organized life which itself is indispensable to living a meaningful life... — TheMadFool
Asking a question presupposes the question has an answer, else the asking is a nonsense question. But certainly the asking is not the answer itself. — tim wood
And maybe in asking the question why, we are looking for an answer that has always been there. — Antony Nickles
It's certainly true that asking the right question is often 90% of the quest to find the right answer. — fishfry
I would argue that only a possible answer must be consolidated - not necessarily known - before the question posited — Possibility
I’m a little confused by the question (if there is one) posed. Maybe there isn’t one and that’s cool. Is your post about whether or not conceiving of something means that you “know” about it?If so, know what about it? Anything? — Anthony Minickiello
Like I could speculate over the existence of unicorns and have a preconceived image of what unicorns look like in my head, but it doesn’t follow from those facts alone that I know all there is to know about unicorns, right? Moreover, I could conceive of what a moral life is like, but does the mere fact that I posed the question prove that I know what a moral life is? So I could use some clarification. — Anthony Minickiello
Or if the question has to do with “knowing the answer before the question is asked”, I’m not sure that is necessarily true for all questions. Maybe I could ask my teacher for clarification on a math problem without having a clue of their response, right? — Anthony Minickiello