emordnilap wrote:Ludwig wrote:Also, my view of the world is essentially mystical, and I think any idea based on material progress - a "better future" - is barking up the wrong tree.
That's an interesting line on a couple of counts. To address one, am I right in saying that you don't like the idea of a 'better future' based on material progress but you see a better future by some other criteria? Or that there's no such thing as a better future?
Well no future seems to turn out as good as we envisage it. We will never attain "heaven on earth", although a lot of people believe we will even if they won't quite admit it. Human nature always gets in the way. Death gets in the way. I read a book a while back about the "psychology of happiness", and it was quite interesting, but at one point the author wrote of the "tragedy of death". If we are going to view life as intrinsically tragic because of death, we might as well give up now.
BUT... I also believe there is a higher level of reality that makes the individual human life insignificant. I'm not sure what form it takes or whether it can even be described in terms of "our" reality. I used to be agostic about its existence, but I have enough evidence of it from personal experience, and from books, to convince me that there is
something more.
On another level: what is the ultimate goal of humanity? To be happy? The problem with the pursuit of happiness is that it relegates ethics to being a mere means to an end; it rejects the idea of self-denial, of doing things because they are the right thing to do. I've slowly come round to the idea that what we call morality is not simply a tool of evolution to benefit our species, but something inherent in the nature of things. All the major religions seem to start from this basic premise, twisted though they inevitably become by worldly leaders.
I realise this all sounds very earnest, but you did ask
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."