MyDoorsAreOpen
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2003
- Messages
- 8,549
I forget which famous dead guy first said something praising "the examined life", but he basically implied that people who think deeply and critically about themselves, their lives, and their place in the big picture will automatically lead lives that are fuller, richer, and more worthwhile to live. (I really can't be skewered to look up the exact quote or author right now.)
If my interpretation is correct, then I take issue with this statement. And this is coming from someone who has chosen to examine his life a lot, and doesn't regret having done so. Why must intellectual curiosity be everybody's cup of joe? This is like people who spontaneously make art and take joy in living life artfully feeling better than people for whom art plays a much more minor role in their lives. In either case (and many more), I don't think it's possible to say that the latter person's life is inherently impoverished, that their experience of the world is necessarily of a lesser quality. It's just a difference is people's ways of engaging with and breaking down the world they encounter around them.
I like to think, don't get me wrong. I've probably burned thousands of calories in a day just on thinking, many times. But there are definitely times and situations that call for no thinking, I've found. Going to a concert full of impassioned fellow fans of an artist that really moves you is one that comes to mind off the top of my head -- it's a pure sensory-emotional experience, and the inner dialogue just tends to fall quiet for the duration of the experience. Cardiovascular workouts to strongly motivational music can have this effect too. I'll testify to thinking not being much help in meditation either. What would a strong proponent of the examined life say are the limits beyond which examination becomes unhelpful excess?
If my interpretation is correct, then I take issue with this statement. And this is coming from someone who has chosen to examine his life a lot, and doesn't regret having done so. Why must intellectual curiosity be everybody's cup of joe? This is like people who spontaneously make art and take joy in living life artfully feeling better than people for whom art plays a much more minor role in their lives. In either case (and many more), I don't think it's possible to say that the latter person's life is inherently impoverished, that their experience of the world is necessarily of a lesser quality. It's just a difference is people's ways of engaging with and breaking down the world they encounter around them.
I like to think, don't get me wrong. I've probably burned thousands of calories in a day just on thinking, many times. But there are definitely times and situations that call for no thinking, I've found. Going to a concert full of impassioned fellow fans of an artist that really moves you is one that comes to mind off the top of my head -- it's a pure sensory-emotional experience, and the inner dialogue just tends to fall quiet for the duration of the experience. Cardiovascular workouts to strongly motivational music can have this effect too. I'll testify to thinking not being much help in meditation either. What would a strong proponent of the examined life say are the limits beyond which examination becomes unhelpful excess?