2017-05-09 11:48 GMT+02:00 mike.v...@gmail.com <mike.v...@gmail.com>:
> > > 2017-05-09 10:45 GMT+02:00 Lyberta <lybe...@lyberta.net>: > >> do...@mail.com: >> > I think you're caught in the same trap, unable to realize your own >> > potential for lack of a moral standard (it also suffers as a result of >> > an Atheistic philosophy), and unable to accept a pointless existence. >> >> When I was 19, I was in a very bad situation. Everything I've ever >> believed in was false. So I've spent the next 6 months looking for >> truth. Thankfully, I have dropped out of college by this time so I had >> time to investigate. >> >> And in one moment it dawned upon me. There is no truth. Everything is >> relative. People invent their own truth and start believing in it. So if >> I want to stay unshackled I must not believe in anything. >> > > There are many truths but non come close to reality. > > >> >> The next thing was supposed to be suicide but I couldn't do it. I don't >> know the future and I don't know what will happen when I die. In fact, >> I'm trapped inside my own consciousness and by definition can't escape >> it and see the truth. Remember Plato's allegory of the cave? >> >> Another thing that bugs me is, since I don't believe in anything, I also >> don't believe in science. I can't predict what's gonna happen in the >> next moment. Every once in a while I get in this state of mind where I >> understand that I understand nothing. >> > > Believe that you are here. Your time here is brief. Enjoy it while you can. > > >> >> > In any and all cases I think you might enjoy a book that is eyeopening, >> > insightful and uplifting, with respect to the world around you, as >> > opposed to your more dreary, despairing, world view. >> >> I was forced to read books at school and this gave a huge hatred for >> them. I remember I've tried to read a fiction book at psychiatric >> hospital and after the 1st paragraph I was so enraged that I quickly put >> it away. Though this mostly applies to fiction. >> > > You can't control anything but a small part of yourself. > > You do however have a choice. Not making a choice is a choice itself. > > The're is no thing in this world that you must but one thing: Undergo the > results of your choice. > > Getting enraged by books is a choice. > > Don't get overwhelmed. When that happens you'll panic and reason will > vacate your mind. > > You are allowed to believe in things that are not real. > > Science is not a fixed thing. It's an ever changing truth towards reality. > http://chem.tufts.edu/answersinscience/relativityofwrong.htm > Found a more complete one: http://hermiene.net/essays-trans/relativity_of_wrong.html > > > Religions mostly advocate absolute truth. There is no absolute truth. > > Sience is knowing that your viewing the universe through a keyhole and you > are probably be wrong in your assessment of what you see. > > Accept that you'll need to base your choices on what you know now. You > cannot make choices based on things you might come to know. > > Relax and live. It is worth your time. Don't anger yourself on ignorance > of others. But don't think you are above another. We're all different. Be > proud of it. > > This life might just be a test for the next. And the more/fuller you live > the bigger your obstacles you must overcome. At least that's how I see it. > > >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> arm-netbook mailing list arm-netbook@lists.phcomp.co.uk >> http://lists.phcomp.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/arm-netbook >> Send large attachments to arm-netb...@files.phcomp.co.uk >> > >
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