- Joined
- Mar 15, 2013
That or something gay about the human spirit.To live it.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
That or something gay about the human spirit.To live it.
Good point. To build on that: if one was meant to figure out the meaning of life, someone would have by now.The search for the meaning of life in today's modern age is pointless because there's nothing to show for it. You can spend ages meditating and contemplating but it's nothing anyone would pay you for or trade you for it. Also many times people get blinded by what they would believe the meaning is supposed to be instead of seeing or accepting as it is.
Good point. To build on that: if one was meant to figure out the meaning of life, someone would have by now.
The search for the meaning of life in today's modern age is pointless because there's nothing to show for it. You can spend ages meditating and contemplating but it's nothing anyone would pay you for or trade you for it.
Tell L. Ron Hubbard, Sun Myung Moon, Shoko Asahara, Pat Robertson, or any of the other billionaire cult leaders of the world that.
Yeah you got a point I personally never really think about exploiting people like that. I still believe though the actual meaning would be something really mundane and it would get these desperate dumb people really depressed if they found it.
I second that. There are a fuckton of people on this planet who all have different expectation, plans and so on for their life.As an existentialist, I am of the opinion that existence really has no meaning beyond what we ascribe to it. It's a blank canvas that we add our colors and brush strokes to.
I would go further and say it would be depressive if life had any inherent meaning. Because if it did, it would make all (but the one who's actually right) of our schools of thought and our individual goals objectively useless.I would argue that there is no "meaning of life" that we should universally strive for.
I mean, one could argue that all or most philosophy leads towards a "grander picture", but that shit gets convoluted fast.I would go further and say it would be depressive if life had any inherent meaning. Because if it did, it would make all (but the one who's actually right) of our schools of thought and our individual goals objectively useless.
In the end, there is no meaning. Life on Earth is essentially a rare accident in the grand scheme of the universe. As far as life goes, we really only work as a paperclip maximiser, stopping at nothing with the sole end objective of living and reproducing. So really, I think "to reproduce" is as far as you're going to get in terms of a meaning of life, but the need to reproduce itself is a meaningless optimisation process.
We're just a lucky lonely blip in the universe if we do find other life whats even the chance of them developing to our level of sentience if nothing else here on earth is even close to us. It's a grim lonely thought once we reach the stars to find nothing but dust and rocks. There are just so many tiny one in a million factors that caused the earth to even support multi-cellular life.
I little off topic, but I personally am confidant that any species with the technology to travel reliably between worlds would have literally zero reason to fight... ever. Why fight human beings over Earth when you can just take fucking Mars? Or Saturn's rings? Or build a sphere around your home-star and have more energy than you possibly use? Or put yourself into mini-computer chips that last millions of years?If that life is anything like us, it's probably lucky for both of us that life is fairly infrequent and intelligent species few and far between. The whole speed of light thing means we'll probably find out about any such life long before we actually have to interact with it directly.
It would be like stealing from your next-door neighbor for food, when you have millions of dollars, and Giant is next door.