In the end, life is just a struggle for power.  As soon as one starts to think 
in terms of entitled or not entitled (beyond rhetoric and tactics), it is just 
taking your eye off the ball.   Whether it is for the best or not is in the 
end, subjective.

Btw, it's good you point out the concept of the "underlying thread".   Same 
idea:  There's the stated topic of a thread and then there are latent topics.   
Usually latent topics are more interesting anyway.   An individual can be a 
class or an individual can be one of a billion instances of a latent class.    
Mostly we are all redundant, and encouraged to be so -- the latter -- good 
little consumers, churchgoers, and taxpayers.

On 4/10/19, 7:46 AM, "Friam on behalf of glen∈ℂ" <[email protected] on 
behalf of [email protected]> wrote:

    The underlying thread seems to be the extent to which we are part of a 
fluid and the extent to which that fluid's phenomena are distinct from those 
phenomena generated by the individual parts, the humans.  Individualist ⇔ 
socialist spectrum, the ontological status of groups (including whether your 
animals are mere slaves or full members of your group), cyborg or healthy 
organelle, etc.
    
    It reminds me of the quote I think highlights the individualist's 
arrogance: "I don't know why we're here.  But I'm pretty sure it's not to enjoy 
ourselves." (attributed to Wittgenstein)
    
    Why do we think we should ever "feel recharged", "be happy", "be healthy", 
etc?  I look at the way my cats behave, compare their lives to that of the 
stray we fed (and who bled all over our patio every time he ate, who when we 
took him to the Feral Cat Society, killed him right off the bat because he had 
so many diseases) and I can't help but wonder *why* individuals are so entitled 
to think they deserve anything at all other than the opportunity to exist ... 
if even that.
    
    
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