Triangle
Full Member
Posts: 356
Likes: 134
|
Post by Triangle on Jun 17, 2021 0:35:07 GMT
So, life is worth living? I think that it depends on what we relies and what we wants.
If we relies on prosperity, sure material life is worth living, but what about spiritual values?
But if we relies on grown, on concrete process of nature, we are relying on things which endures since the creation of world.
So, nature, if we master it, is a reliable thing.
|
|
sai123
Full Member
Lifelong learner
Posts: 118
Likes: 86
Country: India
Region: Andhra pradesh
Ancestry: Globalist
Politics: Apolitical
Religion: Agnostic
Age: 18
Philosophy: Analytical
|
Post by sai123 on Jun 24, 2021 12:53:58 GMT
I think in my opinion if we embrace our surroundings we live a happy life,no matter what the differences are.If we want to make our life worth living then we need to find various spiritual practices which helps them to find their worth living.But when if nothing works they find sadness,frustrations all over the world. Some people like me doesn't follow or believe spiritual values which it finds hard to know our lives worth living Happy reading
|
|
|
Post by joustos on Jun 24, 2021 14:53:20 GMT
I think in my opinion if we embrace our surroundings we live a happy life,no matter what the differences are.If we want to make our life worth living then we need to find various spiritual practices which helps them to find their worth living.But when if nothing works they find sadness,frustrations all over the world. Some people like me doesn't follow or believe spiritual values which it finds hard to know our lives worth living Happy reading In order for you to say that you do not follow or believe in spiritual values, you must know that "spiritual values" are, even though you do not list them, for example, Religion, Asceticism, Sex, Sports; furthermore, not following/believing in spiritual values does not imply that you don't have spiritual values, even though you may not be aware of them or may never have thought about, or investigated, them. For instance, you value food, if you look for it and eat it when you are hungry; you go to school or you read some books, or you read online information, if you have an innate curiosity to know or to understand or to discover what your ancestors, or humans in general, have been doing or creating, or if you like to be with some friends of yours or with your family, or if you take time to contemplate natural landscapes or artworks. A value is whatever you actually value, which could be simply a non-omission -- not depriving a little brother or sister of yours of your presence or care, not depriving your People/Society of some possible invention or beautiful work or love. I am sure every human being has more values than he realizes and that, because of them, his life is worth living.
|
|
antor
Junior Member
Posts: 87
Likes: 51
Country: Sweden
Politics: Middle Left something
Religion: Apatheist
Age: 35
|
Post by antor on Jun 24, 2021 15:28:16 GMT
To me it's a complex question. To begin with there's so much to define with "life is worth living". Life as in the mechanism of life or as in my perception of me living? You usually mean the latter, but anyway. I would rephrase it as
Is my ongoing perception of me living and experiencing the world, worth continuing with the actions leading to it?
It's almost a circle question. And to me, I don't really take a stance. I like some bits of it, I dislike others. There's no need for me to have an opinion about the whole.
|
|