• TiredThinker
    831
    How do we decide what matters? Towards the end of our lives we probably don't have the mental functionality to concentrate on anything but the basics, but that alone doesn't make the basics worth more? Is what matters and what we're willing to forgo have everything to do with our own mental state and less to do with the world we are trying to describe?
  • Deus
    320
    Being content, finding joy in the little things and accepting the world as incredible incompetent incomplete and hopeful.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    How do we decide what matters?TiredThinker

    Generally I don't decide. I act.

    Is what matters and what we're willing to forgo have everything to do with our own mental state and less to do with the world we are trying to describe?TiredThinker

    I don't divide the world into deliberations about what matters. I act.

    Now if in acting I get 'knocked on my ass', I might learn and reflect or try something new. My actions are based on whatever's already there inside me, a consequence of socialization, enculturation, personality, reading, conversations, that kind of thing. I don't sort it out or care to sort it out, I make judgements and go with them.
  • Mikie
    6.7k
    How do we decide what matters?TiredThinker

    It's a matter of values and the prioritizing of those values. What do you care about? What do you like or love about life?

    I think actions speak much louder than words (or thoughts...or professed beliefs), so looking at how we spend our time is, in my view, important. Not the time that we experience, per se, but the time we've standardized through the agreed upon duration of a "second" and a "day" -- so we can be a little more objective about it. How many non-sleeping hours are we spending on x, y, and z? That will tell you a lot about where your priorities are -- i.e., what "really matters" to you.

    So we better try our best to align our time with our values. If we spend excess amount of time (A) alone, drifting, watching TV (or screens), overeating, being sedentary, or working a job we hate rather than (B) spending time with family and friends, or generally being sociable, or working in the community, or spending time getting healthier by being active and eating well, or doing creative, productive work voluntarily -- than we're likely in real trouble, because in this case B > A in terms of what matters, but A > B in terms of what we actually do.

    To reverse a lot of this requires real reflection, an awareness that there's a problem, a desire to want to change, and the wherewithal to formulate a plan and stick with it. It means overcoming unhealthy habits of mind and body that we've developed, and which says something about our society as well.

    Not an easy task. But an important question.
  • 180 Proof
    15.4k
    How do we decide what matters?TiredThinker
    To do so I think one must suffer, lose, fail ... reflectively.
    ... whatever you're doing that prevents you from killing yourself. — Albert Camus
    NB: Such as cultivating habits of courage ... of learning ... of ecstasy ...
  • Yohan
    679
    What matters to us is survival and evolution. So when we ask if something matters, we are asking is it necessary for survival and helpful toward evolution.

    Can I live without this?
    Is this empty (going nowhere) or full of potential?
  • Seeker
    214
    Many things can and will happen between now and tomorrow, we and our circumstances change along with our chemistry and our ever changing external realities. Tomorrow we will reflect differently from today, to walk ahead of today might be considered meaningless in that context.
  • I like sushi
    4.8k
    We do not decide what matters. What matters is present it is just a case of paying attention and being honest with yourself. - not that this is an easy task.

    Note: Edit your OP as it is incoherent in places.
  • alan1000
    200
    I'm recalling a British comedy movie of the 1950's called "The Man Who Liked Funerals". One of the characters says: "Remember the family motto: first we act, then we think!"
  • TiredThinker
    831


    I'm incoherent in places.
  • Abdul
    46


    I think such an approach to life is generally an unbalanced one. One should always spend time reflecting and evaluating their own judgment, sharpening the moral self if you will. I wouldn't practically heavily rely on one of my virtues such an intuit as attractive as it may seem. It's something I need more of personally, though.
  • Banno
    25k
    How do we decide what matters?TiredThinker

    When you cross a swamp, where you decide to put your feet depends on how firm the ground looks. Be prepared to change your footing if the ground gives way under your weight. It's also not a bad idea to step where others have already stepped, and to keep an eye on how those around you are getting on.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    What matters is what makes you alive, and not just material, but emotional, intellectual and spiritual sustenance. It is not enough to merely be alive, we need to feel alive. If you feel alive your feelings, thoughts and actions will also be lively.

    Each individual is unique, human diversity is great; so there are no universal rules governing what matters. The way and its struggle is different for each person, but the formula closest to being able to claim universality I can think of would be Nietzsche's "become who you are".
  • Banno
    25k
    Reads like an ad for Nike.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    I think such an approach to life is generally an unbalanced one.Abdul

    What does an unbalanced life mean and how would you demonstrate that this is the case?

    One should always spend time reflecting and evaluating their own judgment, sharpening the moral self if you will. IAbdul

    What does it mean to reflect? When is it done and how is it done?

    What does sharpening the moral self mean?

    I wouldn't practically heavily rely on one of my virtues such an intuit as attractive as it may seem.Abdul

    I don't understand this sentence? Are you saying that you do not trust your own judgements?
  • Janus
    16.3k
    Reads like instructions for going to the outhouse.
  • Banno
    25k
    Shitting matters more than prestige footwear.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    True, shitting is essential to survival, but if instructions are required something is terribly amiss. Feeling alive in the sense I have in mind is not essential to survival, but is rare; no instructions can be given and prestige footwear won't help. Go figure, eh?
  • Banno
    25k
    ...but if instructions are required something is terribly amiss.Janus

    Never used a pubic toilet?

    Feeling alive is pleasant, but does it matter? Naturalistic fallacy, yet again.

    General gripe: , , , and you all posit suggestions that fall at this first hurdle. What we wish to do is not always what we ought to do. Nor can one derive what we ought do from what we in fact do. Basic stuff.
  • Banno
    25k
    I agree, except for you spelling of arse. An undesirable Americanism.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    Never used a pubic toilet?

    Feeling alive is pleasant, but does it matter? Naturalistic fallacy, yet again.

    General gripe: ↪Deus
    , ↪Yohan
    , ↪Seeker
    , ↪I like sushi
    and you all posit suggestions that fall at this first hurdle. What we wish to do is not always what we ought to do. Nor can one derive what we ought do from what we in fact do. Basic stuff.
    Banno

    I was referring to shitting and specifically outhouses, not public toilets. I hate using them and avoid it as much as possible, but I have never needed instructions.

    If you don't feel alive then your life is wasted, so of course it matters. It has nothing to do with naturalism.

    There is not "what we ought to do", other than try to feel alive and to appreciate the life in others. Everything follows without the need for instructions. Instructions are for the machine men.
  • Banno
    25k
    but I have never needed instructions.Janus

    I'm sure it's not you who shits on the seat or bleeds in the sink, but it is apparent that instructions for using public toilets in a way that does not put others at risk might be of use.

    If you don't feel alive then your life is wasted,Janus
    Why? We might make your unhappy life not a waste by harvesting your organs...

    You haven't presented, and can't, present an argument because you can't move from what is the fact to what ought to be the fact.

    Otherwise, it's just organ harvesting or advertising slogans.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    Why? We might make your unhappy life not a waste by harvesting your organs...

    You haven't presented, and can't, present an argument because you can't move from what is the fact to what ought to be the fact.

    Otherwise, it's just organ harvesting or advertising slogans.
    Banno

    If no one feels alive then life is wasted. and harvested organs won't help, so you're only kicking the can down the road.

    I don't need to present an argument; it is self-evident that the life lived with a vivid intensity of feeling is better than the unlived life; a life that manifests a paucity of feeling; a life of just organ harvesting and advertising slogans. Is the latter the life you want for yourself and others?
  • Banno
    25k
    it is self-evident...Janus

    Ok, so long as you are happy...

    :roll:
  • Janus
    16.3k
    You don't look so happy there; what's the matter?
  • Banno
    25k
    It's bloody raining again. Can't get out in the garden.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    It's raining up here too. I have a fractured ankle and have been more or less stuck in the house for the last five weeks, so it doesn't make so much difference to me. The dogs would like me to go outside and throw the ball for them, but they're not hassling me as they usually would if it were not raining. Hopefully it'll ease off and I'll be able to attend to their desire for ball action. :smile:
  • Banno
    25k
    So what matters is that it stop raining.

    Ankles are so badly designed. Proof that there is no god, or that he's a right arsehole.Or that things started to go bad when we came down from the trees. Poor choice on our ancestor's part.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    So what matters is that it stop raining.Banno

    Right, so that we can do what makes us feel more alive.

    Ankles are so badly designed. Proof that there is no god, or that he's a right arsehole. I think things started to go bad when we came down from the trees.Banno

    Right, down from the trees, or up on two legs. In my case I came down about 2.5 metres on a ladder that slipped out from its position leaning against a wall; I came down vertically and landed with my whole weight on the right foot, it being still on the rung. Never had a problem with my ankles previously.
  • Banno
    25k
    Right, so that we can do what makes us feel more alive.Janus

    You never have such a clear and distinct apprehension of the fact of being alive as when you are bored shitless. Which entirely undermines your point.

    I was up on the roof yesterday, trying to locate a leak. I hate ladders. Treacherous, unreliable contrivance of the devil. Killed a friend, one did, moving under him so as to cast him down.

    Think I'll go and paint turps and linseed oil the handles on my garden tools.
  • Janus
    16.3k
    You never have such a clear and distinct apprehension of the fact of being alive as when you are bored shitless. Which entirely undermines your point.Banno

    No, since I was talking about feeling alive, not noticing the fact that you are alive. I hardly ever feel bored, and when I do it certainly does not consist in feeling alive; quite the opposite. But maybe that's just me; you know, human diversity...

    I consider myself lucky to have come down vertically and not sideways onto the drop saw that might have led to my demise.

    I also use (gum) turpentine and linseed oil on my wooden tool handles. Works well on steel too, once any rust has been removed.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.