What sort of knowledge is it, do you think, that "to know it is to lose one's mind"? — Bitter Crank
I say you are wrong.If what I say is true then all the geniuses in science and math have been walking a tightrope - precariously balanced on a thin line, with high risk of falling (insanity). — TheMadFool
So, it seems to me that the difference between madness and genius depends on the intelligence and knowledge of the audience. — TheMadFool
Or even the science crowd, usually. Never overestimate the intelligence of academic people. You see, thinking out of the box is as difficult for them as it is for other people.Well, let me try at this from another angle. Some of the, what I call ''good stuff'', really difficult concepts in subjects like philosophy, math, science, etc. are beyond the mental reach of ordinary folks. — TheMadFool
Is it somehow more noble to work 20 or 60 hours per week?Mad people are those who go blindly through life, working 40 hours a week in some menial job, fully invested into this 'life' of materiality. So much so, that no question of enigma remains, no hint of awe. These great swathes of dull, anaesthetised people who live as if they are already dead. That is mad. It is not knowledge they possess, but a dangerous forbidding of knowledge. — emancipate
I pointed out that the charge of madness comes from those who lead an unexamined life. Worse than unexamined, ignorant. It is this collective ignorance that decides what should be denoted sane. — emancipate
Is it that the deeper you think the more the chances of insanity?
Is there such a thing as dangerous knowledge?
Are we better off not knowing some things? — TheMadFool
I think that the further away from the truth you are the more shocking the truth is for you — Christoffer
If someone has a mental meltdown because of knowledge, it's because they weren't even close to the knowledge in the first place and the distance between their understanding and the truth is what created the trauma. — Christoffer
No, there's no such thing as dangerous knowledge, there's only danger in indoctrination into the illusion that becomes the danger to the truth when revealed. The knowledge itself is not the danger, it's the human stupidity that is. — Christoffer
That's not actually my point.I see. So, you don't see anything of note in this. — TheMadFool
Here it's not a limit of cognitation, but a limit of overthinking... being focused on one thing. The limit of cognition is quite easy to find and isn't so damning: one just doesn't get something. I'm sure you as I know the feeling.I've heard people warn others to not overthink as if there's such a limit to cogitation beyond which it may be harmful. — TheMadFool
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