If you're alluding to apatheia, maybe the difference between active indifference and passive indifference — 180 Proof
With understanding comes acceptance. Acceptance can never happen without understanding. Resignation is as what you mused above -- one has no choice or lacks energy to quarrel. — Caldwell
I can't make my meaning any plainer or clearer. Read the Stoics. — 180 Proof
To run away. — Yohan
Acceptance is dynamic and adaptable. Resignation is giving up due to inability to adapt to things not conforming to plans? — Yohan
You can accept things that are hard to accept. Cheer doesn't have to factor into it.The way it seems to me is both acceptance & resignation involve adapting oneself to facts, the former cheerily and the latter begrudgingly. — TheMadFool
How about data, information, and knowledge are various parts of a car, while wisdom is the one that steers the car? One actually has to practice driving to get good at it. Reading about cars, roads, and driving isn't enoughThe first part of the transformation of data to information and knowledge makes sense to me, but the last phase does not make sense to me. It sure does not happen naturally. — Athena
You can accept things that are hard to accept. Cheer doesn't have to factor into it. — Yohan
From google definitions:
begrudgingly: reluctantly or resentfully.
"he somewhat begrudgingly accepted a reduced role for the better of the team" (Google's example sentence. Underline added)
Resign: accept that something undesirable cannot be avoided.
synonyms: reconcile oneself.
I don't like that I will have to die some day. But I don't begrudge the fact. Its a neutral word, though its application is to undesirables. — Yohan
Hard truths, like that we are all going to die some day, may start out as begrudging acceptance, but eventually lead to peace and joy. "Begrudgingly" means one has not fully adapted yet, psychologically.You mean to say that a person, the sage obviously, who accepts truths/facts doesn't gain happiness/pleasure/contentment from it? — TheMadFool
If you and your opponent are in equal positions, say at the start of the game, your acceptance of that fact is probably emotionally neutral.↪Yohan To accept & to resign, to use a chess analogy, seems to be aware of what pieces are still in the game, where they are, then to strategize for a win/draw/stalemate & to realize that checkmate is a foregone conclusion, there being no point playing any further respectively. — TheMadFool
Being reluctantly accepting of everything is painful.Why? — TheMadFool
If everybody had to be attacked by a lion to know lions are dangerous, we would have a world full of amputees, severely scarred people, not to mention very well-fed lions. With IQ, vicarious learning is possible, greatly increasing the odds of survival and, if you've mastered the art of learning from the bad experiences of others, a good life. With experience, you'll learn all right but, as people have told me n number of times, the hard way. — TheMadFool
How about data, information, and knowledge are various parts of a car, while wisdom is the one that steers the car? One actually has to practice driving to get good at it. Reading about cars, roads, and driving isn't enough — Yohan
Being reluctantly accepting of everything is painful.
Being neutrally accepting of everything is emotionally pointless.
Being cheerfully or gratefully accepting of everything is an end in itself. Inherently "good" in that it feels good, may be good for one's health, and may be contagious. Further, its easier to be accepting when your feeling gratitude. — Yohan
In activist ( agonist) politics it's said: "Be realistic, demand the impossible!" :victory: :mask:Does it make sense to desire impossible things? — TheMadFool
Perhaps this:I think I get it now.
What prevents people from being wise enough to learn from others? — Athena
Does it make sense to desire impossible things?
— TheMadFool
In activist (agonist) politics it's said: "Be realistic, demand the impossible!" :victory: :mask:
I think I get it now.
Perhaps this:
• acceptance = affirm that X is best / least bad of alternatives;
• resignation = deny that there are any alternatives to X. — 180 Proof
Whatever — 180 Proof
"Accept" is the word we commonly use. But since we are here in this thread discussing it, you truly don't believe that resigning is accepting, right? You utter the word "accept", but really it's not intellectually coherent without understanding. By understanding we mean, rational and logical. If you can't justify something, you can't accept it. Acceptance is a choice. Resignation is giving up.See my reply to 180 Proof. To resign oneself to one's fate is to accept what's happening and what one thinks will happen. — TheMadFool
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