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originally posted by: Metallicus
Your entire outlook is self-defeating. I know you don’t want to be “told” anything, but you don’t have positive outcomes from a negative mindset.
If you believe the world is against you it definitely will be
originally posted by: Isurrender73
As long as we claim self-righteous authority we will continue to dictate the lives of those whom we can't understand which is the opposite of freedom.
originally posted by: DISRAELI
originally posted by: Isurrender73
As long as we claim self-righteous authority we will continue to dictate the lives of those whom we can't understand which is the opposite of freedom.
Why did you leave out "political correctness", which is the most visible expression of "self-righteous elitism" in modern culture? Isn't the above an exact description of the phenomenon, which now extends to people enthusiatically inventing new excuses for exercising control, in the form of imaginary grievances? It was the first thing I thought of when I saw "self-righteous" in the thread title.
In England recently, a teacher lost his job for letting slip the comment "Well done, girls" to a class which included somebody claiming to be transgender. A career destroyed to give satisfaction to a narcissistic control freak who had suffered no genuine injury.
Anyone who can exercise control is part of an elite.
originally posted by: Isurrender73
Knowing would be impossible except if the programmers or God were to reveal themselves. This is why I find the argument of freewill verse predestination so intriguing.
If it's predestined than I was supposed to have this thought anyway. So it really makes little difference what we believe, because we still have to go out and act either or both scenarios out.
This quote is from Jiddu Kristnamurti. www.reddit.com...
Is there any relationship between the thinker and his thought, or is there only thought and not a thinker? If there are no thoughts there is no thinker. When you have thoughts, is there a thinker? Perceiving the impermanency of thoughts, thought itself creates the thinker who gives himself permanency; so thought creates the thinker; then the thinker establishes himself as a permanent entity apart from thoughts which are always in a state of flux. So, thought creates the thinker and not the other way about. The thinker does not create thought, for if there are no thoughts, there is no thinker. The thinker separates himself from his parent and tries to establish a relationship, a relationship between the so-called permanent, which is the thinker created by thought, and the impermanent or transient, which is thought. So, both are really transient.
Pursue a thought completely to its very end. Think it out fully, feel it out and discover for yourself what happens. You will find that there is no thinker at all. For, when thought ceases, the thinker is not. We think there are two states, as the thinker and the thought. These two states are fictitious, unreal. There is only thought, and the bundle of thought creates the 'me', the thinker.
originally posted by: MaxTamesSiva
a reply to: Isurrender73
Never put the key to your happiness in someone else's pocket.
originally posted by: Isurrender73
To look at thought apart from actions leaves an incomplete philosophy. Einstein believed 100% of our actions were socioeconomic but I disagree. I believe at some point it is possible to break free from the programming.
His belief in causal determinism was incompatible with the concept of human free will. Jewish as well as Christian theologians have generally believed that people are responsible for their actions. They are even free to choose, as happens in the Bible, to disobey God's commandments, despite the fact that this seems to conflict with a belief that God is all knowing and all powerful. Einstein, on the other hand, believed--as did Spinoza--that a person's actions were just as determined as that of a billiard ball, planet or star. "Human beings in their thinking, feeling and acting are not free but are as causally bound as the stars in their motions," Einstein declared in a statement to a Spinoza Society in 1932.
www.talkleft.com...