Sincerely apologize if this is the wrong place for such a question(/rant).

The context of the question relates to “Self” and maybe about “Power” in general.

I’m assuming the following maxims hold true:

  • Unexamined life not worth living…
  • Philosophy is lived. Choices primarily determine your philosophy

Please to correct my assumptions or reasoning. Can elaborate on above if needed.

I tend to myself in circles regarding the importance of philosophizing and examining my life. Maybe it’s a symptom of some mental issue… With every new idea I learn, I now have to consider it and balance it with all I’ve learnt in the past. Each choice becomes a battle of value systems and ideas and perspectives and constraints. It’s tiring to the point where I try not to think and just “do”.

But then that path leads me to an autopilot where my choices fall to my default “human” state overridden by the philosophy modules installed at the time. Then it devolves into the unexamined life. Or then life throws a curveball. I have to snap out of it and need to reassess everything going into the philosophizing state above.

Philosophy feels like an indulgence.

I’m guessing this pendulum is not new. On a global scale, Academia are cutting philosophy department budgets as it’s easier to divert money to “actionable” disciplines. No point in “wasting” time in thinking about thinking about doing things. Who needs a meta-compass if we need to walk the distance anyway (even though it helps a tremendous deal if the compass is in the right hands (which hold the power)).

I know I’ve reduced the argument to 2 buckets. I’m currently trying to consume Zen literature trying to get rid of my buckets and/or/xor trying to bring harmony of various buckets in my life… (https://tinyurl.com/verse20)

My question is: how do you manage all this philosophizing in your life? How useful is this indulgence?

Happy to accept any books/articles on this. Thank you.

  • button_masher@lemmy.mlOP
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    My impressions of the Tao after making 6ish courses on chewing the Tao Te Ching have been simply: Stop thinking. Become a simpleton. Go with the flow and do as little as possible, but in the right moments. If you do too much, you’ll break stuff and cut yourself. Oh and be kind and patient too.

    Which is AN answer to this “hard determinism” conundrum. I feel a similar sense of being an ‘agent’ of causality, ruled by a certain lack of free will… However, I have felt extremely strong feelings of free will where I was able to nudge myself in two domains. Maybe you’ll relate:

    • Relationships: Choosing to stay antisocial or ‘making an effort’ with someones really feels like a conscious decision
    • Mild environmental tweaks: E.g. Installing/Uninstalling an app such as an effective alarm app or deleting an addictive game.

    Again I know these had a lot of casual pushes but it’s the sense of control which feels good. Then you get to watch the causality unfold and influence your life. Ikiru in this thread made a good point about the community and the faith element of this journey. Which sounds like your claim of ‘let’s take it as axiomatic’, as you are having faith in free will… At some point, you do choose who your spend time with and then allow them to influence you. You can decide for better or worse but as you said, the sense of choice is there.

    Sidebar: I have always been able to clap with one hand? Imagine treating my entire hand as a castanet, with your fingers hitting against your base of palm, resulting in a weak clap. That minor sense of knowledge had always hindered me in understanding the full weight of that koan. Ah well…

    But to answer my own question of the user of philosophy, thanks to mulling over both of your ideas is: Philosophy increases your awareness of the casual factors in your life. Then it’s possible to nudge a little better, i.e. a little more ‘upstream’ in the flowing current of life. But it’s important to pay attention to your surroundings and act in that briefest moment where you do feel you have a choice.

    Thank you again for engaging. “My” conclusion has probably been said much more eloquently by some philosopher 5 trillion years ago but it’s nice to get a proof by induction sometimes.