No , all there is to life is looking beautiful, the rest will take care of itself. — Wittgenstein
Looking beautiful is all there is to success in society. I will elaborate more on this but I want you to think about it. — Wittgenstein
It's not about being successful but ruining it. You could be an accomplished scientist but if you are ugly, people see see an ugly person before seeing a scientist. It's unavoidable. Imagine covering gold with poop, you would be disgusted. — Wittgenstein
If you looked like Alain Delon, your life would have been a lot easier and fun. — Wittgenstein
A beautiful face indicates a beautiful being. — Wittgenstein
Ranging from friendships, occupation, social status and relationships. It overrides every other factor in our social life.
People love telling each other that beauty is subjective etc but this isn't true in the way they see it. — Wittgenstein
Depends on the distance from which one looks at a face, and under what lighting conditions. In broad daylight, up close, nobody looks beautiful.
If you looked like Alain Delon, your life would have been a lot easier and fun. — Wittgenstein
I'm not talking about pictures taken with cameras.The lens distortion caused by distance and lens curvature, lighting, background etc affect a picture. In reality, we see people with our eyes ( duh ) and they see pretty much the same person irrespective of background — Wittgenstein
Provided one is a visual type of person, ie. focusing on the visual (as most people are). Auditory types focus on a person's voice and other sounds the person makes.Wittgenstein isn't talking about a picture in the literal sense. He wants to say we can refer to a person by what they look like in everyday language. What distinguishes us from other is our appearance
I'm not talking about pictures taken with cameras.
Look at people: a beautiful person only seems beautiful when looking at them from about 5 to 2 meters, in dispersed light. Go further, and their features become too indistinguishable to matter, go closer and you see all the ugly details of their skin (or makeup).
Then you don't have very good vision. Or you're rather idealistic (to wit: infatuated) or naive.I don't think this is the case, I have been with truly beautiful people and they look beautiful in every setting. They tend to have a lot of collagen in their skin which makes it smooth and youthful, their pores are not visible to the naked eye. — Wittgenstein
However, I think that it is also important to look behind appearances, because surface and deeper levels of knowing others may uncover more than is apparent on a superficial level.
keep in mind, some of the phenom we're discussing is existential for Christian's, not necessarily dogmatic, moral, or even metaphysical, etc.. (The Book of Ecclesiastes).
However, the world we find ourselves in is partly physical. There's no escape. Yet the real joys come from a limbic system that seems, and is, mostly metaphysical.
keep in mind, some of the phenom we're discussing is existential for Christian's, not necessarily dogmatic, moral, or even metaphysical, etc.. (The Book of Ecclesiastes).
I think existential problems include them all. Kierkegaard's last stage ( religious ) includes the ethical and the aesthetic. But its better if we talk in terms of existential philosophy. — Wittgenstein
However, the world we find ourselves in is partly physical. There's no escape. Yet the real joys come from a limbic system that seems, and is, mostly metaphysical.
I agree, we cannot reduce joy to some physical interactions in our brain at the moment. Some scientist and philosophers have suggested a new framework for neurology. An objective scientific inquiry of consciousness is actually not possible. In order to achieve progress in this field, we would need to redefine the scientific method a bit. The main problem they encounter is as follows : The person providing the data is also the source of data, this interference and inseparable state causes huge discrepancies in data. — Wittgenstein
I'm talking about your vision, your eyesight, your ability to notice details.I don't see how photography will improve my perspective. — Wittgenstein
Just not in broad daylight.In the grand scheme of things, beautiful people exist.
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