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nietzsche wrote:Not the general "people dies, I'm people, therefore I'm mortal".
I mean your death. The fact that in a few years, or maybe next week you'll die. You'll cease to exist. Nothingness.
Have you given thought to that?
I'm interested to know if you guys have made changes in your life after coming to terms with your own death, if you have.
nietzsche wrote:But if you don't you risk not living authentically.
What do you fear so much that you are willing to live numbed the rest of your life?
Truth is, the thought never leaves you, it's always there, in the unconscious.
(Retorical questions)
BigBallinStalin wrote:nietzsche wrote:But if you don't you risk not living authentically.
What do you fear so much that you are willing to live numbed the rest of your life?
Truth is, the thought never leaves you, it's always there, in the unconscious.
(Retorical questions)
What does it mean to live 'authentically'?
What are the criteria for such a life?
Are you hating on the future lives of cyborgs?
To live authentically means being true to the deepest part (or some may say highest part) of yourself. The real you. The one that always looks after you no matter what your personality is saying or doing.
You are living an authentic life if you feel you are in control and you are determining your own direction. Your work is a natural outlet for your creativity, your interests and your abilities.
nietzsche wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:nietzsche wrote:But if you don't you risk not living authentically.
What do you fear so much that you are willing to live numbed the rest of your life?
Truth is, the thought never leaves you, it's always there, in the unconscious.
(Retorical questions)
What does it mean to live 'authentically'?
What are the criteria for such a life?
Are you hating on the future lives of cyborgs?
I take to live authentically as to do what you really want, what your whole being wants. For instance, we go to school, get decent jobs and all that because we sort of fear the be unemployed, we fear what others would say if we don't, because we think that's what we oughta do. To live authentically is to do what you really want, you might end up going to school and getting a good job and a family, but you'd doing knowing that that's what you have really decided. Hard to explain. It's more of a feeling.
But for that you need to really accept you own death, when you accept it, you know there's no time to waste doing what you are supposed to be doing. This is also a concept that cannot be really comunicated with words, you have to feel it.
I'm not saying I've done it and I live a full authentic life, but I've felt it for periods of time, or I do it to some extent.
nietzsche wrote:But if you don't you risk not living authentically.
What do you fear so much that you are willing to live numbed the rest of your life?
Truth is, the thought never leaves you, it's always there, in the unconscious.
(Retorical questions)
nietzsche wrote:Couple of definitions found onlineTo live authentically means being true to the deepest part (or some may say highest part) of yourself. The real you. The one that always looks after you no matter what your personality is saying or doing.You are living an authentic life if you feel you are in control and you are determining your own direction. Your work is a natural outlet for your creativity, your interests and your abilities.
Because the sun has not yet risen on the day when Tyr Anasazi, out of Victoria by Barbarosa, will face death graciously. I will kick and claw and bite and scratch and spit my last breath in its face, and as long as you are with me, you will do the same, is that clear?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:+500 Saxibucks to Haggis.
-TG
john9blue wrote:i'm banking on the possibility that technology will advance in my lifetime to the point where we can live indefinitely, and that i'll be able to afford/qualify for the chance to do so. if not, well, shucks
thegreekdog wrote:nietzsche wrote:But if you don't you risk not living authentically.
What do you fear so much that you are willing to live numbed the rest of your life?
Truth is, the thought never leaves you, it's always there, in the unconscious.
(Retorical questions)
Well, for the most part I do what I want. I have a great wife and kids and in order to support them (i.e. make sure they are happy), I have to work. I do like my job. The only thing I don't like doing is sleeping, but I have to do that. I also don't like to exercise, but I do that so I can put off death longer. And I don't think I'm numbed.
I think you've jumped the gun a little bit; skipped a step if you will. You've assumed that since I have not accepted death that I do not live authentically. The step you've skipped is whether or not I'm happy with my life. I am happy with my life, even though I have not accepted death.
So, question 1: Have you accepted death.
Question 2: Are you happy
Conclusion: If answers to (1) and (2), or just (2) are no, then you aren't living life authentically. I answer no to #1 and yes to #2.
chang50 wrote:john9blue wrote:i'm banking on the possibility that technology will advance in my lifetime to the point where we can live indefinitely, and that i'll be able to afford/qualify for the chance to do so. if not, well, shucks
What a terrible prospect,immortality is my worst nightmare.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
chang50 wrote:john9blue wrote:i'm banking on the possibility that technology will advance in my lifetime to the point where we can live indefinitely, and that i'll be able to afford/qualify for the chance to do so. if not, well, shucks
What a terrible prospect,immortality is my worst nightmare.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
How does one know that what they did was really what they wanted? If you go to school, etc., did they really want to do that or not? Social pressures induced that person to go to school, etc., but how do you separate that pressure from the choices that the individual still makes?
john9blue wrote:chang50 wrote:john9blue wrote:i'm banking on the possibility that technology will advance in my lifetime to the point where we can live indefinitely, and that i'll be able to afford/qualify for the chance to do so. if not, well, shucks
What a terrible prospect,immortality is my worst nightmare.
i didn't say immortality. i'd just like to decide when i die. and i probably won't get bored anytime within the next 100 years or so, so i'm gonna need some help from SCIENCE
BigBallinStalin wrote:nietzsche wrote:Couple of definitions found onlineTo live authentically means being true to the deepest part (or some may say highest part) of yourself. The real you. The one that always looks after you no matter what your personality is saying or doing.You are living an authentic life if you feel you are in control and you are determining your own direction. Your work is a natural outlet for your creativity, your interests and your abilities.
1
'Authenticity' is 'being true to some vague spot in you', thus 'being the real you.' Oh, A is A....
'The one that looks after you'. My conscience is the authentic me? This deliberating part is the real me? Or is it just my reasoning faculty? But how can the real me be separated from my personality?
I guess my personality-me is fake? But it can't be, it's what I am. It's part of me. It completes the real me.
2
'Authenticity' is 'the feeling of being in control'. The feeling? If that feeling is false with reality, then how can your life actually be authentic?
I guess they mean 'having an internal locus of control'. However, there's a spectrum between the internal and external l.o.c., but the fake v. authentic brooks no spectrum. It has to be "either-or" because "partially fake" doesn't make sense.
'Your work is your...'
(The 'originality' problem. Therefore, all of one's "natural" outputs are 'partially authentic.' We're stuck with being 'partially authentic' which doesn't make sense.
Then we're running into an inconsistency among the three definitions (incl. nietz).
I'm not buying it.
This authentic v. fake dichotomy is false.
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