In any event, the conclusion I've drawn largely based on this is that, on a long enough timeline, your actions have absolute no consequence to both yourself and the world around you. The end result is the same. As such, if an act has no real effect, and if all roads lead to the same destination, that logically undermines any motivation to do anything. Nothing is ultimately worth the effort because any particular action and even no action all have the same ultimate effect. — runbounder
However, the idea that nothing can be meaningful because of it really bothers me. Which is why I want to be wrong. Can someone break my logic? — runbounder
I'm definitely not depressed. — runbounder
I don't quite see how that follows. For yourself, that may be true. But actions could still have consequences, and those consequences could be permanent. — Echarmion
The question is, can "meaning" or the absence of it really be established by logic? What conditions do you think are required for actions, or life in general, to have meaning? — Echarmion
That's good. What's your secret? — Echarmion
Why can't things be meaningful if they are impermanent or temporal? — ChatteringMonkey
how can things be meaningful if all things are impermanent or temporal. — runbounder
Stop complaining about the temporary nature of life as if it were a bad thing! — Michael Lee
Why not something in between the fleeting moment and eternity? That seems to be the timescale that is relevant for us human beings anyway. There's no need to go to the extremes I don't think. — ChatteringMonkey
Having an impact that is beyond our individual selves gives us meaning, unless you think our families and societies are irrelevant.impermanence makes many (perhaps all) of the constructions of meaning actually meaningless. — runbounder
Living in the moment is disingenuous because you are giving up on a part that is essentially human. — ChatteringMonkey
Is a meaningful existence possible? — Runbounder
I'm going to take his argument one step further. Suppose you did actually have that choice, but I add the condition that once you step into it, there will be no end to it. You will live forever! Now would you choose to be born? — Michael Lee
Having an impact that is beyond our individual selves gives us meaning, unless you think our families and societies are irrelevant. — Relativist
For instance - meaning. Meaning is a human social construct, likely developed some ways along the road of our evolution. It dose not exist in nature. What use for meaning dose a bird have? — Pop
Buddhism is the only complete philosophy of consciousness. They have been dwelling on this stuff for 5000 years .There is a secular variety. — Pop
Consider the alternative of an eternal afterlife. How can anything you do in THIS brief life have a meaningful impact on that which exists eternally?Having an impact that is beyond our individual selves gives us meaning, unless you think our families and societies are irrelevant. — Relativist
On a long enough time frame, sure. — runbounder
Consider the alternative of an eternal afterlife. How can anything you do in THIS brief life have a meaningful impact on that which exists eternally? — Relativist
I wonder about this. If meaning is created by humankind, what put within humankind the desire to have meaning. In an otherwise cold, dead, universe, it has no value or purpose. In fact, if anything, it's detrimental to us being a symbiotic part of the natural world. Yet we seek it. I have no idea why. — runbounder
I do tend to lean towards buddhist teachings. They tackle this subject much better than other faiths. Not to mention, my main spiritual mentor is a buddhist. I haven't come across any readings/teachings that cover this exact topic, though. — runbounder
The culture you grew up in.
Not a dead / live or otherwise universe - a nothing universe - very nice place to be in. — Pop
I suppose I am coming from a somewhat selfish perspective here. But, I'm also not just concerned about myself. Instead, I'm thinking of all of our selves. In other words, one possible answer is that my individual self does not have any meaning, so why not live a selfless existence? Well, if my self doesn't have meaning, than neither does anyone else's, so that would be a pointless venture. — runbounder
A think a better metaphor than the headache example is building a sand castle. You put all that time and effort building a thing that eventually just becomes a part of the beach like it never was there. The only real value of it was the entertainment of the process and product while it existed. — runbounder
I just wanted to agree with that last point...and add: I also don't see how "living forever" has the attraction it has for those who suppose it will happen."I honestly don't know. I would have to exist to make the choice whether or not I want to exist. I also don't see how living forever would solve anything. — runbounder
Like I said earlier, I want to be wrong. I still likely have a lot of years to live. The problem with my logic is that, while it is seemingly sound to me, it is also quite boring. Additionally, this leaves me with the feeling that everything I am doing is just a waste of time. And that bothers me, a lot. I'm fine with the ultimate nothing/something dichotomy. Whichever way that goes is simply what it is. However, the idea that nothing can be meaningful because of it really bothers me. Which is why I want to be wrong. Can someone break my logic? — runbounder
Also, a lot of people are happy to be alive. — Noah Te Stroete
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