Tannhauser
angry insecure male
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- Today 4:39 PM
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2015
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- 1,462
There are those philosophical problems one saves for the weekend, and then there are those that actually influence your decisions. I think this is one of the latter.
When I see people who have achieved great things, they invariably have this trait: they live with a strong narrative, a certain blindness to alternative ways of looking at things. I.e. they have made up their minds about certain things, made judgements about them, and simply stopped considering the alternatives. These people are often considered charismatic and inspiring.
I think that people who think a lot (for example many INTPs) happen to not have a very strong narrative. To them, everything can be questioned and re-evaluated at any given point in time, so it is hard to have a consistent narrative on which to base one's goals and behaviours. Sure, I have a strong narrative from time to time, but it is usually temporary – until I find some new angle from which to view things.
On one hand, this constant rethinking of things does not really lead you anywhere. Sometimes you even end up walking in circles. Because in the end, every narrative contains a lot of subjective judgements – it is merely a matter of personal choice. On the other hand, to someone who is constantly on the search for truth, committing to one narrative is, in some sense, mental suicide; I cannot simply stop thinking about things. Being able to think about these things is a certain freedom that a lot of people do not have. It also entails a certain humility towards alternative viewpoints – possibly what some people call "open-mindedness".
So the question is: what to do with this freedom. giving it up to commit to one goal, or keep it and expose yourself to the possibility of walking in circles forever?
When I see people who have achieved great things, they invariably have this trait: they live with a strong narrative, a certain blindness to alternative ways of looking at things. I.e. they have made up their minds about certain things, made judgements about them, and simply stopped considering the alternatives. These people are often considered charismatic and inspiring.
I think that people who think a lot (for example many INTPs) happen to not have a very strong narrative. To them, everything can be questioned and re-evaluated at any given point in time, so it is hard to have a consistent narrative on which to base one's goals and behaviours. Sure, I have a strong narrative from time to time, but it is usually temporary – until I find some new angle from which to view things.
On one hand, this constant rethinking of things does not really lead you anywhere. Sometimes you even end up walking in circles. Because in the end, every narrative contains a lot of subjective judgements – it is merely a matter of personal choice. On the other hand, to someone who is constantly on the search for truth, committing to one narrative is, in some sense, mental suicide; I cannot simply stop thinking about things. Being able to think about these things is a certain freedom that a lot of people do not have. It also entails a certain humility towards alternative viewpoints – possibly what some people call "open-mindedness".
So the question is: what to do with this freedom. giving it up to commit to one goal, or keep it and expose yourself to the possibility of walking in circles forever?