However, I still feel that the prevailing narrative as ‘life as the outcome of a biochemical accident’ will never make for a coherent social philosophy. Humans need to feel as though they’re part of a story, not the result of an accident. Maybe we can spin an entirely new story, one that makes no reference to the cultural traditional of the past, but somehow I doubt it - the attempt will always result in the sense of being ‘stranded in the present’. It also implicitly dishonours all of the ancestors whose ways we now see as being antiquated and superstitious. — Wayfarer
Humans need to feel as though they’re part of a story, not the result of an accident — Wayfarer
What’s a ‘savior’ without ‘salvation’? — Wayfarer
What is salvation but being saved? — Pfhorrest
Is the story of an unplanned child abandoned in the wilderness who nevertheless somehow survives and goes on to become a great hero who reshapes the future for the better not a noble enough story? — Pfhorrest
What is salvation beyond a nice house in the suburbs? — Wayfarer
Got any particular story in mind, there, or is it just a hypothetical? — Wayfarer
Well okay the part where he dies tragically at the end is a downer. — Pfhorrest
Why can't the story of mankind be that kind of story -- we were "born nobody" and then made ourselves great and noble anyway -- and still be inspirational and satisfying? — Pfhorrest
Ikigai (生き甲斐) (pronounced [ikiɡai]) is a Japanese concept that means "a reason for being." The word refers to having a meaningful direction or purpose in life, constituting the sense of one's life being made worthwhile, with actions (spontaneous and willing) taken toward achieving one's ikigai resulting in satisfaction and a sense of meaning to life. The concept of this idea comes from a larger and more inclusive philosophy used within the Japanese traditional health system called the Wuxing that was introduced into Japan in the early 6th century from China and embraced by local folk religion and culture. — Wikipedia
Eudaimonia (Greek: εὐδαιμονία [eu̯dai̯moníaː]; sometimes anglicized as eudaemonia or eudemonia, /juːdɪˈmoʊniə/) is a Greek word commonly translated as 'happiness' or 'welfare'; however, more accurate translations have been proposed to be 'human flourishing, prosperity'[1] and 'blessedness'.[2]
In the work of Aristotle, eudaimonia (based on older Greek tradition) was used as the term for the highest human good, and so it is the aim of practical philosophy, including ethics and political philosophy, to consider (and also experience) what it really is, and how it can be achieved. It is thus a central concept in Aristotelian ethics and subsequent Hellenistic philosophy, along with the terms aretē (most often translated as 'virtue' or 'excellence') and phronesis" ('practical or ethical wisdom').[3] — Wikipedia
Maybe that's all that is needed, but where are the wellsprings of that, in modern technological culture? — Wayfarer
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