What do you think is the ultimate solution to all of life's challenges?

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Divine Power

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What do you think is the ultimate solution to all of our problems? As for me, I believe that God has already provided the answer to everything, whether it's through faith, guidance, or understanding. Life’s challenges often seem overwhelming, but in my experience, the divine solution is rooted in trust, patience, and knowing that there’s a bigger plan at play. What’s your perspective on this? Do you think there’s a higher power guiding us, or is the solution something we need to find on our own?
 
There's no "ultimate solution" because life isn't some malfunction that must be patched
Life is a constant flow of choices, consequences, and problem-solving, and the only tool we have for navigating it is reason
The idea that there is a divine answer or bigger plan sounds comforting, but it's a shortcut that evades the actual work of thinking clearly, judging honestly, and acting deliberately. "Trust and patience" are not virtuous when they're substitutes for understanding

If there is a solution to life's challenges, it's in using your mind without compromise. Anything less than that is not salvation, rather it is surrender
 
Alright, everyone, this is a serious thread, bad answers will get the X :!:
I am being serious. Death is the end of it here. You’ll either cease to exist, or there’s an afterlife and you’ll go there.
Life is short. Often far shorter than we’d like it to be.
If you mean ‘how do I make life great?’ Then that’s another question.
I agree with all of this post except this bit:
the only tool we have for navigating it is reason
Reason alone isn’t enough. That’s why we have feelings and morals.
I think you’re either thick enough to just react to life, in which case your happiness will be determine in a kind of stimulus/response sort of way, or you think about things and become unhappy. The challenge then is to find happiness again. You have to examine life. Live in a way which doesn’t conflict with your morality. Other than that I don’t know. I could say one has to have a process of learning and reflection and growth, and I believe that, but I’m still kinda miserable.
 
Reason alone isn’t enough. That’s why we have feelings and morals.
I think you’re either thick enough to just react to life, in which case your happiness will be determine in a kind of stimulus/response sort of way, or you think about things and become unhappy. The challenge then is to find happiness again. You have to examine life. Live in a way which doesn’t conflict with your morality. Other than that I don’t know. I could say one has to have a process of learning and reflection and growth, and I believe that, but I’m still kinda miserable.
Appreciate the openness, lemme give my cents on it
I don't agree with the notion that reason needs supplementation from feelings or personal morals. To me that's as if you said a compass needs to be balanced by gusts of wind or gut instinct. Feelings aren't tools, they're readouts. Unless I'm misinformed about neuroscience, feelings are signals from our subconscious about what we (usually uncritically) believe. Like, they can alert us, but they don't guide us. And if they contradict reason, then they're wrong.
It's the same thing with "morality" if by that you mean whatever code someone happens to hold. Living without conflict isn't the goal, people can be serene while doing monstrous things, there's more than enough examples for that. What matters is whether your moral code is true. And you can only determine that using reason.
You're right that thinking can hurt, but the pain isn't proof that reason fails. Rather, it's often proof that reason is doing its job. That something in you needs to be re-examined.
If you ask me, the challenge isn't to dilute reason with feelings, it's to reforge your emotional life around what's actually real.
 
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Probably some variation of the serenity prayer can be the answer to all challenges - knowing one's sphere of influence, exerting positive influence within it, and accepting what lies outside of it.
 
Feelings aren't tools, they're readouts.
I agree - I think we are probably not in disagreement here, except on the derivation of where that readout is from (I think you’re not a believer and I am?) I personally think we have souls mad that good and evil are not only actions but things in and of themselves. I suspect you may take a more reductionist view, but the outcome will be largely the same: testing of an idea against a moral core (however you feel this is derived) and living accordingly
What matters is whether your moral code is true.
Yes I agree - I think there is something beyond reason driving that, and I don’t think someone who derives it from reason is wrong. I just think there’s something else going on. Perhaps i think reason is itself a Readout of the soul,
And you can only determine that using reason.
Well I disagree with reason being the base layer, but I’m not terribly sure it matters much as long as the outcome is the same.
Or maybe it does. It matters to me - let me give an example. Kier starmer. He’s a man who thinks ‘right’ flows from the law. If rhe law changed tomorrow to say he had to throttle every kitten in reach he would and he’d have no compunction in doing so. Now you will argue that he isn’t reasoning - and you’d be right. But that’s sort of how I see reason being the last layer. It can be hijacked. Perhaps feelings can be too, and I think that truly moral people are coming from the same point; they examine the externality against an internal benchmark. They just name it different things
 
I agree - I think we are probably not in disagreement here, except on the derivation of where that readout is from (I think you’re not a believer and I am?) I personally think we have souls mad that good and evil are not only actions but things in and of themselves. I suspect you may take a more reductionist view, but the outcome will be largely the same: testing of an idea against a moral core (however you feel this is derived) and living accordingly

Yes I agree - I think there is something beyond reason driving that, and I don’t think someone who derives it from reason is wrong. I just think there’s something else going on. Perhaps i think reason is itself a Readout of the soul,

Well I disagree with reason being the base layer, but I’m not terribly sure it matters much as long as the outcome is the same.
Or maybe it does. It matters to me - let me give an example. Kier starmer. He’s a man who thinks ‘right’ flows from the law. If rhe law changed tomorrow to say he had to throttle every kitten in reach he would and he’d have no compunction in doing so. Now you will argue that he isn’t reasoning - and you’d be right. But that’s sort of how I see reason being the last layer. It can be hijacked. Perhaps feelings can be too, and I think that truly moral people are coming from the same point; they examine the externality against an internal benchmark. They just name it different things
True, I'm not a believer, but I'm sure I get where you're coming from
The idea of a soul is compelling. The notion that there is some deeper metaphysical core from which right and wrong radiate.
But allow me to identify a problem here. If that "moral core" exists, how would you access it except by reasoning about what you feel, what you observe, and what you conclude?

Even if it were indisputably true that you and I had souls, you'd still need reasons to interpret the soul's signals. And if its signals were to contradict with reason (like if your soul told you to strangle kittens or obey evil laws) then you'd rightly treat that as suspect, at least I hope so. Which means that reason still sits above it as final judge.

The idea that "reason is just a readout of the soul" is poetic, but ultimately empty, for the simple reason that either the readout aligns with reality or it doesn't. If it does, there is no need for mysticism to validate it. And if it doesn't, then mysticism won't save it.
To me, that is the crucial distinction. What you call your "internal benchmark" is less important than how you validate it. And the only method that doesn't collapse into subjectivism or obedience is.......... reason.
 
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As for me, I believe that God has already provided the answer to everything, whether it's through faith, guidance, or understanding.
Then what happens when something bad happens to you and you cannot use God to console your plight? I'm not dismissing faith, but using faith as the ONLY solution would just leave you open for manipulation or naivety.
 
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