I think the best way is to act as if freedom exists. — Angelo Cannata
You seem contradictory — Angelo Cannata
400
Can wars be avoided? — Average
So long as the state grows freedom and liberty doesn’t. Our political sort in life will invariably be decided upon its whim and fancy. — NOS4A2
Are we the authors of our fate? — Average
Are our forms of government, such as monarchy, generated necessarily by forces outside of our control or are we able to write history? — Average
governments are created by people, and history is written by people. — Xtrix
Can wars be avoided? Can revolutions be avoided? — Average
Coup attempts are usually tried a second time. The planning is taking place now. — Jackson
I'm wondering whether or not we can make and unmake governments whenever we see fit. I'm asking can we make any form of government we desire whenever we desire or if our desires are somewhat irrelevant? — Average
The evidence seems everywhere — Xtrix
I think we can choose to create a government we want — Xtrix
No one chooses the historical moment or the place or family or culture-language/s or social class in which one is born. No one chooses their ancestry, ethnicity, color, sex(uality), talents, limitations, handicaps. No one chooses their desires or disgusts or cognitive biases. No one chooses the natural disasters they suffer or diseases which afflict them. No one chooses psychopathy or mental illness or to become suicidal. No one chooses accidents or black/white swans that happen to them. No one chooses never-decreasing entropy (e.g. "the arrow of time") or aging or forgetting. So much of what one is and becomes one cannot choose – this is fate – the hand one is dealt (in a game, and with rules, one does not choose) played with sorrow or with joy: choose! Futility (what you call "fatalism") or amor fati? No one chooses even to face this choice! :fire:Why would someone be a fatalist? Is there any evidence that supports such a belief? — Agent Smith
No one chooses the historical moment or the place or family or culture-language/s or social class in which one is born. No one chooses their ancestry, ethnicity, color, sex(uality), talents, limitations, handicaps. No one chooses their desires or disgusts or cognitive biases. No one chooses the natural disasters they suffer or diseases that afflict them. No one chooses psychopathy or mental illness or to become suicidal. No one chooses accidents or black/white swans that happen to them. No one chooses never-decreasing entropy (e.g. "the arrow of time") or aging or forgetting. So much of what one is and becomes one cannot choose – this is fate – the hand one is dealt (in a game, and with rules, one does not choose) played with sorrow or with joy: choose! Futility (what you call "fatalism") or amor fati? No one chooses even to face this choice — 180 Proof
And what you call "fatalism" I call futilitariansm. — 180 Proof
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