blanketyblk
Mage
- Jun 9, 2019
- 575
Being open and talking. everything else i can deal with. but if i don't know what is going on inside your head. i can't work with you.
Avatar checks outSerenity and peace.
It makes me sad just to think about it. Both are incompatible with living, which is a constant hunger... bound to live like a raised dead. It's no wonder necromancy is widely frowned upon.
Too idealistic... seemingly unattainable, but you said the highest. What can possibly come on par with these two? No hunger, no rotting, no change, no suffering... too appealing to think about anything else.
Oh, are we are talking about the value of others to ourselves? Then it's definitely usefulness. Be it from kindness, erudition, selfishness, sense of humor, self-awareness or whatever. "If the person is perceived as useful to me, then I value this person."
You played it! Tell me you played it. Of course you played it... What I am, a blithering idiot?Avatar checks out
As these are also important to me I would also say loyalty other than the typical family, friends, and pets some form of morals and balance.Kindness, humillity, respect, intelligence, honesty, self-awareness
Well, you're assuming that what is natural is self-interested. That's generally rejected by modern evolutionary theory.I think the purer it is, the more unnatural it is.
Copying things from Wikipedia. Not taking yourself too seriouslyHonesty and integrity. Empathy and love.
Loyaltys overrated. Actually it's potentially dangerousAs these are also important to me I would also say loyalty other than the typical family, friends, and pets some form of morals and balance.
I didn'tYou played it! Tell me you played it. Of course you played it... What I am, a blithering idiot?
You did played it, didn't you?
But what does it imply? I'm often hearing phrases such as "<something> is an illusion/delusion", like ego and free will, but what does it tell us?I entirely recognize that value is a delusion.
Well, if you ever want to, and get a chance. It has fancy dialogue lines, made by a young and ambitious game studio (at that time). Magic invades Victorian era. Feature to play as mentally deficient, with stunted dialogue options and journal entries.I didn't
But wait, am I really mentally deficient or do speech difficulties and emotional immaturity only make me seem so? Supposedly I'm a brilliant mathematician with a keen grasp of numbers.Well, if you ever want to, and get a chance. It has fancy dialogue lines, made by a young and ambitious game studio (at that time). Magic invades Victorian era. Feature to play as mentally deficient, with stunted dialogue options and journal entries.
I often wonder about that too. What I concluded is that saying "X is an illusion" means that X isn't exactly what it appears to be, not that there isn't anything that deserves to be called X. So in the context of the ego illusion debates, you'd often hear people say that what we think of when we say "I" isn't something that can be located precisely. It might seem to us to be a unified whole in some sense, but in reality it's a bunch of separate processes that somehow give rise to the illusion but cannot be said to be unified in a proper sense.I'm often hearing phrases such as "<something> is an illusion/delusion", like ego and free will, but what does it tell us?
We see morality/values as ends in themselves, even though they can't aid us in our quest for a better life, what can be more delusional than that?
But wait, am I really mentally deficient or do speech difficulties and emotional immaturity only make me seem so? Supposedly I'm a brilliant mathematician with a keen grasp of numbers.
Oh this is amazing, much like me in real life. Well, minus the brilliant mathematician part. I do love mathematics though.
Yes, that seems to be more sensible, and the other thoughts too. I don't know what to comment on that, but would gladly hear more about it from both of your insight.What I concluded is that saying "X is an illusion" means that X isn't exactly what it appears to be, not that there isn't anything that deserves to be called X.
That's just brilliant, she'd be my favorite as well.a chemist who used herself as a guinea pig for self-enhancing experiments, and indeed she succeeded, but also screwed up her appearance as a result.
Wow, I'd be extra special in this universe. I'd still be a special snowflake like now, but unironically.Oh, characters with low beauty score also get special treatment.
Not at all. In fact I may have sounded that way myself. But it wasn't my intention. I merely wanted you to elaborate a bit so that I could better understand what you meant.but sometimes i seen to condescending and granting thanks to my lack of social grace. I apologize if that'sthe case.
Because I was so stuck on my definition of delusion, I took the "even though" as meaning "in spite of" somehow as I was expecting a contradiction somewhere, whereas now I see that the second part of the sentence could have been merely an elaboration on the first one.We see morality/values as ends in themselves, even though they can't aid us in our quest for a better life, what can be more delusional than that?
I see the logic in that if we presupposed that civilizations aren't beneficial to individuals in any way and that we could do away with them, but I doubt that people you're talking about are making that presupposition.although the huntering-and-gathering lifestyle is more beneficial, people still first think of things in terms of the system - in terms of how they can fit in this particular state of civilization -, not on how we should act to ensure tangible satisfaction.