I have saved and improved many lives but I can't save and improve all lives - I find this very distressing. — Truth Seeker
:up:I sometimes think humans are addicted to crisis. — Tom Storm
I think that if we could work out what is fact and what is opinion, it would help us get on with each other better. — Truth Seeker
I think it's inevitable. At least, wiping out most of us and them - odds are, something will remain and start over. But probably not a bunch a altruistic vegans, alas!I worry that we will destroy ourselves and all the other species with our conflicts. — Truth Seeker
They're fighting over their stories. (God likes us and doesn't approve of them)What about religious terrorists who kill people who don't share their beliefs? — Truth Seeker
I was, most of my life. Our daughter married a 'conservative' who had written a pro-worker dissertation for his Sociology course. We asked him "Don't you care about equality?" He said "I've moved on."Aren't you upset about all the suffering, inequality, injustice, and death in the world? — Truth Seeker
How do we decide what is fact and what is opinion? — Truth Seeker
Please clarify what you mean. Are opinions not beliefs?Rather, opinions are propositions that are not truth-functional. — Lionino
I think we have a need to strive. To struggle. Nothing worthwhile comes easy. We don't appreciate what we don't work for.I sometimes think humans are addicted to crisis. — Tom Storm
I despair. — Truth Seeker
You'll move on from that, too. You know the stages of mourning? It's like that: eventually, you reach acceptance, make peace with the way of things, and just do what good you can in your small sphere of influence. — Vera Mont
What about things other than games? Have you ever learned something that was difficult? That took a lot of time and effort? And, when you finally got it, felt great satisfaction and happiness? Do you feel that way with things that come easy to you? I would say the joy comes from the accomplishment at least as much as from possessing a new piece of knowledge.Patterner I see your point. Games are certainly more enjoyable to watch if it's a close call. It keeps us on edge, trying to guess who will win. — Truth Seeker
Lots of things are outside our control. I tried to be stoical about it but I failed. Perhaps I failed because I am currently depressed. I scored 23/27 on https://patient.info/doctor/patient-health-questionnaire-phq-9 today. — Truth Seeker
I think we have a need to strive. To struggle. Nothing worthwhile comes easy. We don't appreciate what we don't work for. — Patterner
which is why sports is the most important thing in the world. Unfortunately, it can also mean fighting, and taking from, each other. — Patterner
I think we need to find more ways to strive for, and gain satisfaction from, things that don't involve other people. Me against nature. Me against myself. Who knows? — Patterner
We cannot** since only the dead are free from "all harm" or conflict; however, far more often than not, we can prevent greater harms from occuring and/or reduce harms that have been inflicted. Lack of perfection** is neither a rational nor a moral argument against doing good (i.e. negating worse) whenever possible. Nonviolent conflicts are usually resolved less harmfully than violent conflicts which almost always follow from either refusing to engage in and/or defecting from nonviolent conflict (e.g. dialectics, deliberations, dialogues). So again I ask, Seeker:How can we prevent all harm? — Truth Seeker
:chin:Absent this Sisyphusean agon (i.e. 'the unexamined life is not worth living'), how else can we – at least some small yet nontrivial fraction of the eight billion of us – thrive (flourish)? — 180 Proof
I hope so, too. You have to move on. You can't let yourself be stuck in regret over something you can't fix. You have to accept your own limitations - and what's much harder, mankind's. You have to concentrate on the small good things: the number of people who have changed the way eat, the way they use resources, the way they think; the people who dedicate their lives to making things better. As a species, we may be self-destructive, but individually, we are not a complete loss - many of us are worth cherishing, respecting, supporting, helping. Do what you can do and don't deny yourself the pleasure of small victories, just because the big ones are beyond your reach.I hope you are right. — Truth Seeker
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