it sounds like I'm stating the obvious here, but the way I see it, there are two opposites attitudes towards human life's general difficulty: Either it is meaningful, and overcoming it is a proof of personal worth, or it is meaningless, and as such it should be lowered for everybody.
I can't think of a third way but again this feels like a half-baked philosophical idea teenagers routinely come up with.
like this
#aEvl_us Our #World #Exposed reshared this.
clayote
in reply to Hypolite Petovan • • •Hypolite Petovan
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in reply to clayote • • •clayote
in reply to Hypolite Petovan • • •you're supporting my argument. Difficulty proves *their* personal worth, because they want it to
The ones who are content to sit back and relax do exist, it's just that they stop once they've made fifty million bucks or so
Hypolite Petovan
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Hypolite Petovan
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silverwizard
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silverwizard
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Edward Kowal
in reply to Hypolite Petovan • • •Hypolite Petovan
in reply to Edward Kowal • • •@Edward Kowal I wouldn't give any of these name to my children if I ever had more.
More seriously, I haven't read any philosopher. I can't maintain focus reading for too long and I've never craved formal philosophy.
But I'm curious what you personally got from them!
Edward Kowal
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