People aren’t disposable in a tribe or clan. — Noah Te Stroete
This having to look outside of one’s occupation for meaning is unique to civilization and not something you would find in an indigenous tribe. That is my thesis. — Noah Te Stroete
It’s a highly idealised view. From what I’ve read violence was endemic in many hunter-gatherer cultures. — Wayfarer
Therefore, the job you do, such as bookkeeper, manager, social worker, or psychiatrist, and the tasks you carry out in secular, worldly affairs are insufficient to give meaning to your life. Even helping other people, is insufficient to fulfil your destiny. You will still need to pray, keep God's law, and sexually reproduce to find fulfilment. — alcontali
Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.” — Hanover
Sounds like a philosopher to me. — Noah Te Stroete
All — All worldly things; is vanity — Not in themselves, for they are God’s creatures, and therefore good in their kinds, but in reference to that happiness which men seek and expect to find in them. So they are unquestionably vain, because they are not what they seem to be, and perform not what they promise, but, instead of that, are the occasions of innumerable cares, and fears, and sorrows, and mischiefs. Nay, they are not only vanity, but vanity of vanities, the vainest vanity, vanity in the highest degree. And this is redoubled, because the thing is certain, beyond all possibility of dispute. — Benson Commentary
It's a translation of Ecclesiastics 1, usually given as 'Vanity! Vanity! All is vanity!' Which I think is quite comparable with the Buddhist teaching of 'the emptiness of all things'. But it doesn't mean that everything is meaningless, rather that the things we attach importance to, and labour for, are ultimately transient. — Wayfarer
Yes, because in an honest human system, the finished product is the payment. You get to keep the result of your labor, after which you are responsible for its lasting. Your labor isn't tied to the clock or a global economy, it's task oriented, you can work like hell one day to take the next day off...so long as you're making progress toward the finish line. There is a finish line/a terminus (a completed "to do" list) in the truth context; there is no terminus in economic fundamentalism, there's a runaway thing called "bills" which are the sticks and carrots in the future which never comes. Living to pay bills assumes you know what the future will bring...do you know what the future will bring?My wife and I believe it is a combination of being several steps removed from the necessities of life from division of labor, and, for many activities, not seeing a lasting finished product. — Noah Te Stroete
It's shocking so few people feel infantile they can't take care of the needs of living. This, being dependent on others for subsistence, does in fact make me feel impotent. And the more
"successful" and "independent" one is reliant on the principle of exchange in economic fundamentalism, in truth, the more dependent he is (this being a central irony of the human system, it makes people feel more adult and mature the more dependent they are on the system). So the Noble Savage thing is true for me; in any supposed higher species, an individual must be dependent on nothing in between him and the work of living; in other terms, self-reliance/mental and physical autonomy, necessitates a first-order, or direct ontological orientation. What would you do if you had to actually take care of yourself and meet the needs of living? I'm not sure if a solitary, self-reliant animal, like a raptor, a falcon say, isn't more advanced than the average human. — Anthony
But to the OP, I do believe it does shows ancient societies were just as worried about meaning and purpose as today, possibly more given their non-scientific teleological bias. Existential doubt (which we can probably agree is generally thematic to Ecclesiastes) is part of the eternal human condition, not a new problem brought about by modern decay. — Hanover
To my point, Ecclesiastes describes life in a city-state as far as I know and not life in a tribe or clan like the plains Native Americans. — Noah Te Stroete
Those who had pledged to endure the Sun Dance generally did so in fulfillment of a vow or as a way of seeking spiritual power or insight. Supplicants began dancing at an appointed hour and continued intermittently for several days and nights; during this time they neither ate nor drank. In some tribes supplicants also endured ritual self-mortification beyond fasting and exertion; in others such practices were thought to be self-aggrandizing. When practiced, self-mortification was generally accomplished through piercing: mentors or ritual leaders inserted two or more slim skewers or piercing needles through a small fold of the supplicant’s skin on the upper chest or upper back; the mentor then used long leather thongs to tie a heavy object such as a buffalo skull to the skewers. A dancer would drag the object along the ground until he succumbed to exhaustion or his skin tore free. Among some tribes the thongs were tied to the centre pole, and the supplicant either hung from or pulled on them until free. Piercing was endured by only the most committed individuals, and, as with the rest of the ritual, it was done to ensure tribal well-being as well as to fulfill the supplicant’s individual vow. — Brittanica.com, Sun Dance
The point is we are all screwed and human in our vanity doing things out of mainly boredom, discomfort, and survival, mediated through the medium of our society/culture. This is no different for the plains Native Americans or the city-state dweller. — schopenhauer1
To my point, Ecclesiastes describes life in a city-state as far as I know and not life in a tribe or clan like the plains Native Americans. — Noah Te Stroete
Another example is a manager, a thankless job. — Noah Te Stroete
I think it is the lack of meaningful purpose and lack of lasting accomplishment and being so far removed from the necessities of life that results in there being so few mentally healthy people these days. — Noah Te Stroete
Shouldn't people just learn to find value and purpose OUTSIDE OF WORK? Isn't the attachment of my personal self-worth to my job the REAL mental health problem? — ZhouBoTong
Well, surely, they are 'thanked' a good deal more than those who are managed? — ZhouBoTong
The best I can say regarding your OP is that it hints at Marxist notions of alienation, and now you're trying to argue that pre-civilized man was free of such pain. — Hanover
I think the biggest reason as to why people feel a lack of meaning in their life is due to us being pushed into the idea that life has to be in a certain way in order to have a purpose. I think it's more about the relationship between purpose and the action of fulfilling the purpose that makes us question our life's meaning. If we were to treat the purpose of our life and our reaction to knowing our purpose as two separate things we would feel content regardless if we achieved our life's purpose or not, because then we would feel safe in the notion that our life has a meaning, but it's up to us if we want to pursue it or not. And this is, of course, a consequence of societal norms. — Ines
I do think I got your point. Perhaps you didn't get my answer. I'll try to make it from another angle.I think both of you missed my point entirely. — Noah Te Stroete
Actually, people weren't indispensable to a tribe, quite on the contrary: if you had a group of hunter-gatherers, having too many mouths to feed would be a major problem. You have to understand it's not about before there were 'modern' cities, having cities at all is already a clear sign of specialization of work and of a complex culture.My point was that before there were modern cities, when people were living in small tribes and everyone in that tribe had a place, knew everyone else, and were indispensable to that tribe — Noah Te Stroete
And just how much meaning is there more if you are tasked to gather firewood and haul water from distant wells? Sure, everybody would notice this by evening meal if you would not have performed this task, especially if only you would have been given this mission. Yet is that purpose for life? It's more about clarity or simplicity. I would even put it totally the other way around. True purpose rises from things that you as a human being can perform that is something totally else than what an animal does: gathering food, taking care of your children (or making them) and sleeping. Like discuss philosophy with absolute strangers to you living in other continents over a communication network that few can clearly fathom how large it is and how it actually works. If you learn something or improve your writing skills, wouldn't that be great.This having to look outside of one’s occupation for meaning is unique to civilization and not something you would find in an indigenous tribe. That is my thesis. — Noah Te Stroete
The feeling of meaninglessness starts from the fact that you don't have fight every day for your own survival. Your not even so crucial to your family either, that if you die, your family unlikely won't end up in utter poverty begging in the streets and facing hunger. Might have been in an earlier time a possibility when that glamorous 'purpose' was so clear and everything so simple.If my purpose is to provide for my family, and I fail at this, then I still know my purpose even though it is not accomplished. I’m not sure I was getting at this in my OP, though. I think existential meaninglessness comes from having to do a lot of activities in modern society that can seem pointless, but this has a lot to do with how sensitive one is and their personal disposition. — Noah Te Stroete
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