The light at the end of the tunnel may be an express train bearing down on you. — Bitter Crank
Any good ideology has to account for life being unsatisfactory a fair share of the time, but at the same time "letting the good times roll". — Bitter Crank
There is a light at the end of the tunnel. Knowledge and learning may cause you this 'grief' and the perpetual fear that enables those moments of existential crises and even depression or anxiety, but you get through it eventually as you start to articulate your own language and acknowledge your own ideas. You get stronger and stronger as you get more and more objective, but this is about being steady in this process towards autonomy and that is not to say isolation from people or society but as Ralph Waldo Emerson said, that balance between the two where you socialise, learn and interact but go home to reflective practice, to the quiet of reading and the solitude of learning.
Just don't give up. — TimeLine
I really appreciate your advice and encouragement. This renews my hope and my enthusiasm for life and philosophy, for the time being. — JustSomeGuy
Those of us who don't believe in an afterlife may live our lives as though death is a certainty, but it's not. We think we understand the world, we think we can trust our own observations, our own knowledge, our own experience, but the truth is that we can't. — JustSomeGuy
Stoicism seems to fit this description well, based on what I know as someone who just started learning about it. — JustSomeGuy
But I always eventually go back to questioning it all and feeling very down and uncertain and nihilistic about everything for a time. It's possible that this just has to do with my personality, and this is just a natural cycle I go through and will continue to go through. — JustSomeGuy
Oh man BC! Back in the stone ages, aren't we? X-) The way to do this is you go to the search box that you see at the top, and you type there 'Cicero', and then he just pops out just like this:You might want to PM him for some private stoic-talk, or ask him to join the discussion. How to find him? Click on MEMBERS at the top of the page and then select "names" for listing the members. The 'C's are not too deep down, so it won't take you long to find him. — Bitter Crank
Not every one is like Socrates. But there is no doubt that, despite his skepticism, he and everyone around him was subordinated to the cultural norms all around them.If Socrates can do without one, anyone can — aporiap
But there is no doubt that, despite his skepticism, he and everyone around him was subordinated to the cultural norms all around them. — charleton
He never escaped the cell of belief in the eternal psyche, for which no evidence could be possible. — charleton
Do people need an ideology?
But I cannot commit fully to them in the sense that I completely let them inform my thoughts and feelings about the world, because I recognize that we are all just humans, nobody really knows better than anybody else. Rather, I have my own thoughts and feelings about the world, and these philosophies correspond with many of them. But there are certain things that cause me distress, anxiety, and what I would call frequent miniature existential crises. I often come back to questioning what I'm doing with my life, why different things happen, what the meaning of my life is, what the meaning of anything is, why the universe exists at all, whether there is any objective morality, whether anything we do matters in any real way, whether life is even worth living, etc.
Is it possible to be too "open minded"? Do you think people are happier and live more fulfilling lives when they have an ideology they are fully committed to? — JustSomeGuy
It is impossible to have no beliefs: an atheist still has a belief that nothing exists — TimeLine
In the first place it is perfectly possible to make a clear distinction between knowledge and belief. — charleton
In the first place it is perfectly possible to make a clear distinction between knowledge and belief.
— charleton
Make it. — Noble Dust
Belief is a thing which you wish to be true or take to be true for emotional reasons or reasons of tradition, emotion and particularly because of Faith.
Knowledge is that taken to be true based on evidence and reason. All knowledge is subject to revision and is contingent on that evidence. It is demonstrably true. Knowledge is true anywhere in any culture, and not dependant on cultural preferences. — charleton
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