Point of view is necessarily from a single vantage point -- not many.Therefore, Earth is the "center of the conscious experience of the Universe", and the Ontological Point - Humanity. — Gus Lamarch
The whinger is an armchair warrior. It's a way of feeling a sense of purpose without expending so many calories. If so, then whinging might be the closest we can get to being a peaceful species. — frank
Another example, yet it only begs what is being asked. They retired in the middle of nowhere because they want to live in the middle of nowhere. I hope this is getting to the point.Also another example. Imagine a person who has been retired and then buys a house in the middle of nowhere and wants to live alone with their own circumstances. — javi2541997
This somehow breaks the theory of Karl Marx of human is a social animal and is forced to live in communities. So here opens a tangent in the debate about if we are free of living in our own or we are forced to live with others because this is how ever works. — javi2541997
It is a personal decision, absolutely, but still does not provide an answer to why isolation? Could it be a rejection of something? And then there's the continued questioning which doesn't seem to go anywhere.This action is not necessarily selfish or bad if it is a personal decision. — javi2541997
Luckily my cat Nova is here to remind me to take the necessary screen breaks. :)
I find ethics the most fascinating philosophical discipline. Related disciplines such as sociology and psychology also spark my interest.
My honest wish is to be engaged in some lively conversations. Looking forward to writing with you! — TaySan
Bakunin (I guess) thought that those people who don’t want to be with anybody and also not interact at all so not making communities is somehow selfish. — javi2541997
Nevertheless, it surprised me why he thought being lonely for voluntary or personal reasons is considered as “selfish” then, he established that a selfish man cannot reach happiness. — javi2541997
I seem to have the feeling that as the super-ego or some moral tendency defined as a good conscious concerned with truth or whatnot must find that they ought to reduce suffering in the world if they are to feel good with themselves as a philosopher. — Shawn
You're welcome, but I'm mostly doing this for myself. This is fun. — T Clark
Can we not say the same thing about philosophy? — Garth
I like this.A good scientist has freed himself of concepts
and keeps his mind open to what is.
Thus the Master is available to all people
and doesn't reject anyone.
He is ready to use all situations
and doesn't waste anything.
This is called embodying the light. — T Clark
Although there is also a reciprocality. The bad man provides the good man with something too. — T Clark
You have created a non-problem.So, my question is, how does one live in the face of this knowledge? Is life even worth living in light of this view? Or have I just created a false dilemma, a non-problem? — I don't get it
What is a good man but a bad man’s teacher?
What is a bad man but a good man’s job? — T Clark
I say it is, but pure empiricism cannot justify the claim that laws of nature are truly real. That's the problem of induction. — Dharmi
But what does it mean to 'assume' a law of nature that isn't actually real? — Dharmi
In other words, the problem is that we need to assume a "universal" constancy of a kind to be able to do science or live in the world at all, yet in pure empirical terms, no such universal can be known to exist. Because, by definition, empiricism only deals with particular objects and not universals. — Dharmi
Nobody knows how thinking works on any level so I would disagree with their speculation. — synthesis
The reason is that none of these people is using a part of their brain that is asking, "What's next?" They are just "doing it." — synthesis
A lot!And I agree that people do have faith in other drivers (to some extent) but what does that have to do with what we are discussing? — synthesis
Why do these miscalculations happen so rarely? How is it possible that there's such a great chance that you are going to arrive at the beach in one piece? — synthesis
Each driver is making an infinite number of driving decisions and everybody is just a micro-second or two from a lethal mis-judgement. Why do these miscalculations happen so rarely? How is it possible that there's such a great chance that you are going to arrive at the beach in one piece? — synthesis
What are your economic forecasts of consumer behavior or economic tendencies due to the above information provided? — Shawn
Then how can anybody be content (or happy) in such an imperfect world? — synthesis
If you agree with this, then my point was, by having "made peace with them [sources of unhappiness]" you have now removed any obstacle to achieving "happiness" and are now on the path toward it. At the very least making it considerably more reachable. — Outlander
The focus on the nuclear family has eroded the larger network that earlier families have provided, at least in where I live (in Finland). This still can differ from family to family.
Add to this that many don't have children and a lot more are single than before, and you have a genuine problem of basically loneliness, which comes to be a bigger problem at old age. — ssu
Much of this is a matter of definition, but contentment can exist without happiness. Take the person who can have a number of serious health issues but has made peace with them. They can be content, but not necessarily happy. — synthesis
What you call contentment I think is a mature understanding of happiness. — Pantagruel
I actually thought that the debate would be more about whether people are actually able to rise beyond self interest. But, so far no one has challenged that but just queried the whole question of whether it is just a feeling. — Jack Cummins
We all hope that when the end comes, we still will be sharp in mind and have some ability to take care of ourselves. — ssu
People can have only plans what to do, but not the will to implement them. — ssu
They are lucky to be able to do this. But many in their old age have a lot less to work on. I guess, we should add that, when old age comes, often the old people are at the mercy of their family members, not the other way around.I remember my great-uncle, a former ambassador and a career diplomat, decided with his wife that simply staying at home, going to the supermarket was starting to be too exhausting and hence they went looking for a care home and found a nice one. Then they invited the whole family and relatives to see their now living quarters, basically a normal small flat with their furniture from their old home. I think their success was to make the change before either of them was in too frail condition. — ssu
I believe that it has been thrown away, into the rubbish bin of philosophy ideas, just when we need it more than ever. — Jack Cummins
Explain yourself first. — TheMadFool
Usually it isn't an option that they decide not to take. Without an ample welfare net, the family in general has a far more important role to the individual. I think that this basically is because of necessity, not only because off the differences in culture. — ssu
Gravitating many-body systems are chaotic in the technical sense. — SophistiCat
What's silly about it? A black & white photograph is simpler than a color photograph. More parts, more complex. Less parts, less complex. — TheMadFool
In quantum mechanics it is not possible to derive a single outcome from a given cause but it is possible to derive a single cause from a given outcome. At least that's how I understood Kenosha Kid's claim that QM is backwards deterministic. — litewave
Gravity is chaotic! — SophistiCat
There are vaccines being developed in the MRL to protect against this very affliction. :cool: — jgill
I want to know WHY people choose to go on. It's something I wondered about, why do we take life as a good thing or a given but when someone wishes to die they are "sick". What if they just don't want to do this dance anymore and are just tired. — Darkneos
Vaugueness and Lazyness are both properties that can support philosopher. — Don Wade
many thanks, any idea how i can extend this to 800 words? I'm new to college and had to take extended leave because of my illness and I've no idea whatever about logic — gagandeep