What is the point of philosophy? If we don't know what the hell it is all about, we usually do know that we don't want it all to fall apart in the next month. So we play along. We do what one does. We react. — ff0
I relate to this. I have my dreams, etc. But I find that I largely have to
react to life. I try to lean on wise abstract words. I reason that death itself won't hurt. That a certain amount of risk in unavoidable if one wants to live a life worth living. Life bumps us into an anxious abstract mode at times. It forces us to reason about trauma. We make certain adjustments (if we can manage it), and then we settle back down. We get re-absorbed in the relatively smooth patterns of our lives.
But as you say, we largely avoid the disaster that threatens us next month. The closer the disaster is to us in the future, the more we prioritize it, as a general rule. The vague, unavoidable disaster of aging and death waits for the most part behind all the smaller disasters that threaten to fuck us up without ending us. It's a quiet evil laughter that accompanies our otherwise successful disaster-dodging. But it's also the one true cure for the hustle and hassle of this jumping and sliding.
This vision makes me feel large and small at the same time. I can participate and assent to this vast machine I've been thrown into. — ff0
I also relate to this large and small, which I hinted at in your Hegel thread. I am small because I see that I am 'naked' (theoryless, godless) in this world that eats me. But I am 'large' in my disbelief that anyone else is in on some secret. I know what it feels like to have the secret. But it passes as the pain sets in. I don't mean despair (though sometimes something like that.) I mean bodily pain. Maybe just annoying boils on the face. It only takes so much bodily malfunction to shut down the mood that knows the secret. In short, I can see that someone really believes in their secret and remain unseduced. For the most part, they seem wisest who just do the usual things with grace. Even talking about this stuff is a little stiff and earnest. I guess it scratches a certain itch. I thought I'd give online philosophy a try, having read not much but having talked quite a bit about life. ('Philosophy' has an academic smell.)
hy live free? Why die well? Because it feels right. Because it sounds right. For me that's the truth behind the epistemological 'posturing. ' Even this posturing feels right at the time for those invested in a certain notion of responsible, thorough 'rationality.' — ff0
Yeah. That's what my sciency peers don't get. Go truth. Go atheism. Go agnosticism. But it's pretty obvious that the guts are set one way or another. There's a limit to what we can sincerely question or doubt. There's something fixed about personality. Some arguments will never go anywhere. Things just 'sound right' and 'feel right' differently to different people. All the objectivity talk in the world doesn't cancel the objective fact (ding ding) of endless disagreement. This idea that we are tossed into a role doesn't gel well with the idea of us being perfectly free, perfectly rational beings. It seems to be that we have some decisions open to us and others closed. 'I can't turn off what turns me on.'