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Author Topic: Just Thinking...  (Read 962 times)
DDT (12)
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« on: October 28, 2019, 04:21:48 AM »

 
Thinking itself is… challenging! Well, doing so while remaining unsure, undecided… seeking to find real answers and not simply confirmation of what we already think is correct. We don’t seem to relish uncertainty, loose ends, or unanswered questions. Doubt is anathema, confusion is abhorrent, ‘unknowns’ are unsatisfying, and clarity is desirable over blurred vision absolutely! We do like things all simple, clear and precise… Resolved issues don’t make such heavy demands on our reasoning, so we’re able to mentally ‘coast along’ rather than struggle in an endless tug-of-war with difficult questions… Funny about that, too…
 
Nearly all of our most deeply held beliefs, bedrock principles, attitudes, and values are the result of things that were drilled into our heads all along our path of life. From the time we’re extracted from the womb right up until we draw our last breath, we’re bombarded with ‘truths’, absolutes… the answers to all the questions we might have. Religion, political views, choices in friendships accepted or rejected, tolerance for considerable differences or not… heck, right down to what we’ll eat or drink, or eschew, are for the most part inclinations planted in our minds by others… Why is that?
 
It seems only wise for each person not to have to rediscover fire or to reinvent the wheel. All people ‘stand on the shoulders’ of those who have preceded us… we learn from their lessons, successes, mistakes, and revelations. It is the very essence of ‘progress’ in that we’re able to leverage what others have found out for us, so we’re able to then spend our time more productively exploring other 'new' things, so that those who follow us can in turn benefit from those advancements, as well… Makes perfect sense.
 
In a world that has become so complex and dynamic, though, where the rates of new discoveries and changes in technology are increasing hourly, combined with ever-evolving ideas about economics, social structure and human relations, just keeping up has become quite impossible… especially for mere ‘human beings’. Making things even more difficult is the fact we're creatures who have other needs besides grasping all knowledge and mastering all aspects of everything.
 
We also need refreshment, recreation, variety, distraction… ease… companionship, intimacy, and acceptance. Full-on, peddle-to-the metal, intense ‘learning’ will inevitably lead to a full-on blowout down the road… Could the answer lie instead in learning ‘how to think’ rather than simply absorbing ‘what to think’? The ability to figure-out an immediate issue when and if confronted, rather than to know in advance all things about everything based upon empirical, irrefutable ‘facts’? Especially when the ‘facts’ we’re presented are usually ‘cherry-picked’, often out of context, and given in an effort more to influence than to inform.
 
That old parable bears consideration: “Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day… Teach him how to fish, and you feed him for life.” Seems straight-forward enough… only, our complicated world is also inhabited by other human beings, and each one is wrestling with the same issues we are, plus a couple we haven’t mentioned yet… Humanness, to name but one.
 
Yep, every imperfect, flawed human being is born into a world they didn’t create, didn’t choose, don’t understand, and are powerless to change. They are born with a ‘blank slate’ and must spend their ‘formative’ years just learning how to find their place in that particular world, to gain what they need and want, and to learn to deal with success and failure. Much of what is learned is simply what is necessary to ‘get along’ in the world in which they find themselves.
 
Once the fundamentals of survival are figured out, then other things come into play… Things like ego, status and standing, perhaps even thoughts about ‘the future’ and not just the here and now… And, thoughts about independence from control by others, the ability to think for ourselves and to choose for ourselves who and what we might become. Further up on the ladder is the rung of ‘influence’… our ability to persuade and to perhaps shape the thinking of others, and with that to leverage our own individual ability to meet our own needs and wants…
 
All the while, we are surrounded by other folks who’re ‘climbing’ that same ladder of growth and development, seeking to further their own vision for fulfilling their individual needs and desires. The extent to which any given person will seek to exploit his/her greater knowledge and/or ability, and those do vary among all people, will vary depending upon other factors like ruthlessness, attitude towards other people, loyalty, compassion, integrity… Values largely determined by ‘the template’ provided by the culture in which one finds oneself, but ultimately determined by the inner values one has chosen to embrace.
 
Another inescapable, undeniable attribute of humans is the ability and almost automatic resort to viewing everything in terms of 'how does this impact me'. We then usually proceed to interpret things in a way most favorable to ourselves... Is the minimum wage a good idea or a bad idea? It depends in many cases upon whether or not one is looking at receiving a direct or indirect wage increase, or, having to pay higher prices, perhaps fund an expanded payroll. Logical, 'fact-based' arguments can be made to support either view, but one's personal view is usually more influenced by self-interest, especially since either view can be reasonably 'supported'...
 
Is it even possible for us to analyze things objectively and fairly from a neutral perspective? Not impossible, I don't think, but extremely difficult and probably unlikely. We should do the best we can, but since it requires so much information gathering, critical but fair ‘data triage’, self-discipline, intellectual honesty, and time, it obviously also requires nearly super-human effort to avoid the pitfalls or the intellectual shortcuts of self-interest and cumulative bias... inclinations induced by our already formed ideas and beliefs. And, to attempt to do so in the complex and demanding circumstances of modernity... Will Rogers is said to have once observed, “Thinking is about the hardest work people can do… That’s why so few ever actually engage in it...”
 
DDT
 

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Don't just dream it... LIVE IT!

See ya down the road...
Oss
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« Reply #1 on: October 28, 2019, 04:55:11 AM »

"Good judgment comes from experience and a lot of that comes from bad judgement" Smiley

Also from great uncle Will

Positive pontifications Bruce

oss


And one I fail often.....never miss a good chance to shut up. 
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If you don't know where your going any road will take you there
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The emperor has no clothes
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« Reply #2 on: October 28, 2019, 05:00:26 AM »

Great observations  cooldude As I’m reading your story, I kept thinking yeah he’s talking about me. I got a little more pumped up with each paragraph.  Wink Then I got to the final sentence, and KNEW you were talking about me   Angry  Grin

Love your stories Bruce. Thanks  cooldude
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Thunderbolt
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« Reply #3 on: October 28, 2019, 05:10:32 AM »

Bruce you must have sat and contemplated your navel for some time on that one.  Good job.  Much truth in those few paragraphs.
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Daniel Meyer
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« Reply #4 on: October 28, 2019, 02:18:32 PM »

Great write!
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CUAgain,
Daniel Meyer
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« Reply #5 on: October 28, 2019, 04:45:48 PM »

Another great read my friend . I will admit you get " deep " at times but I read them all. You should write a novel.
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I've seen alot of people that thought they were cool , but then again Lord I've seen alot of fools.
Valkorado
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« Reply #6 on: October 28, 2019, 06:49:16 PM »

I need to ponder on this one for awhile!


Good stuff Bruce!
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old2soon
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« Reply #7 on: October 29, 2019, 07:25:42 AM »

        Duirned good read dere My Friend!  cooldude That thinker muscle needed a walk or a kick in the nards!  2funny Far far Too many of the populace swallow whole what the-well what passes-fer the "news media" these days.  crazy2 Made me think of that scene from The Time Machine where the sirens went off and the Eloy walked willingly into the domain of the Morlock. Ponder dat fer a bit. RIDE SAFE.
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Bigwolf
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« Reply #8 on: October 29, 2019, 11:38:06 AM »

As written by a true “thinker”.

Bruce,
You are the least biased and the most introspective person I know.  I am always delighted to hear or read your musings.  Many of your stories have opened my mind to thoughts previously not considered.

Thank you
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Pluggy
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« Reply #9 on: October 29, 2019, 02:34:24 PM »

Thinking is hard work.  That's why so many people avoid it.
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The emperor has no clothes
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« Reply #10 on: November 01, 2019, 11:52:00 AM »

As written by a true “thinker”.

Bruce,
You are the least biased and the most introspective person I know.  I am always delighted to hear or read your musings.  Many of your stories have opened my mind to thoughts previously not considered.

Thank you
Jerry, I couldn't agree more ! We truly are blessed to have Bruce in our lives. I hate to think where this club would be without Bruce and others like him in it.
 Which got me to THINKING. I wonder where I'd be were it not for positive influences like Bruce along the way. There was another thread recently about teachers (or it evolved into teachers). I've had a few great ones, like I'm sure we all have. I've had many others who took me under their wing. And like Bruce, I've had many that have shown a flashlight in the darkness.
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