The subject of the meaning of life and philosophy of it all
is one that has popped up a few times in past weeks and its one I actually
spend some time contemplating. The idea of combining the search for the meaning
of it all and one of my little writing and thought exercises is somewhat
appealing so I thought I would tackle it. Just for shits and giggles I am going
to see what kind of spin and twist I can put on the quotations of some of the
great and not so great philosophers of our time. It may or may not be useful but
it just might be entertaining.
Happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole
aim and end of human existence.
We might as well start off with a heavyweight. Although
Aristotle had a somewhat different view of happiness that I might adopt he is
right in this quote. We hear all kinds of self-serving BS about our purpose in
life. We are told that our purpose is to serve others, to serve God, to serve our
nation, or some other grand and glorious cause. Rest assured when you hear that
drivel that what you are serving is someone else’s self-interest at your own
expense. We are told that our purpose is to breed and carry on the species or to
leave the world a little better than we found it. Its all crap.
Our purpose is to be happy. The caveat here is that you have
to find achieve and support your own happiness. Don’t ask me to pay for your
happiness. Finding what makes you
happiest in life and doing so with zeal and exuberance is the single purpose of
your life. In the isn't ironic category it is also the best way to serve your society, the Deity of your choice and leave the world better than you found it.
If you love being a parent and raising children then you should do so and you
will raise better kids than someone who did it out a sense of convention. If
you love designing and building things you will leave behind better buildings
and monuments than one who does it as a job. Life is short but full of beauty and wonder.
Your job in life is to find that which makes you happy and embrace it. Serve
yourself first and your contribution will be far greater than any of those
serve others first folks could ever hope to achieve.
Do what makes you happy. If you want to marry someone, marry
them. If you want to write the great American novel, write it. If you want to run
a great business, go build it and run it. If you want kids, have them and raise
them well. If you want to be a farmer and work the land, then do that. If you
want to sit around and think great thoughts then by all means do that. Do whatever
makes you happy as long as you pay your own way. A final thought to keep in
mind is that your right to happiness ends right where it may harm someone else’s.
In order to please others, we loose our hold on our life’s
purpose.
Epictetus is one of those overlooked philosophers who really
came close to nailing the meaning of it all in my opinion. He was in some ways
the Nassim Taleb of his time believing that most external events are randomly
determined by fate but we can be responsible for our own actions and responses to
the hand we are dealt by the fate. In this one sentence he nails the single
biggest factors for most individual misery and unhappiness. We care too much
about what others think and want and too little about we want.
It starts early in life and unfortunately most of us carry
that shit to the other end of life. We worry what others think about our career
choices, our lovers, spouses and friends. We allow others to tell us how we should
think, dress, talk, love and live. We do things to please our boss, our
parents, our teachers and so many others in life. Screw them. Stay true to your
purpose and make the choices that make you happy. It doesn’t matter if your parents
like your spouse if you love them. It doesn't matter what the nosy neighbor
thinks of your life as long as you like your life. Find your own way through life and seek only
the counsel of those you admire and trust. To hell with what everybody else
thinks. You are the only one who has to answer questions about your life when
you lay facing death someday. No one else will be there. Live your life so
those answers please you and allow you to leave with a smile.
There is only one good, knowledge, and one evil, ignorance.
Socrates is best known for his death but according to Plato
and Xenophon he had much to say while alive and this may be the best of it.
Knowledge is to be found everywhere and so few take the time to look for it. It
is ironic that in the information knowledge is so readily available and so
rarely sought. A mind that is not always seeking and processing new information
might as well already be dead. You do not have to sit amidst a stack of dry
dusty encyclopedia to find new knowledge or expand your mind. There is
knowledge in fiction, in painting, in music, in nature, in conversation and in
most activities that involve the mind. It seems to me that most would prefer to
spend their time and brain cells observing honey boo-boo and other such
garbage. It is sadly ironic that the greatest tool for expanding knowledge in
the history of the world is used more for angry birds and sharing cat videos. The
quest for knowledge is the quest for life itself.
One has only to look to our political system today to
understand the evil of ignorance. It is far better to let party leaders tell you
what to think than investigate and develop informed opinions. I hear people speaking passionately speaking
about immigration, abortion, gay marriage, wealth redistribution and other such
matters without so much as a single fucking clue what they are talking
about. We believe and repeat what we are told based
on the initial on our voters registration card.
Our schools and universities are no long places where people
go to gain knowledge. We teach today to standardized tests. Individual thought
and exploration seems to be discouraged. We teach a sanitized version of history
that leaves out all the blood, piss and vomit that make up the story of the
world. I am appalled by kids who can tell you we had a revolution but cannot
tell you what the founders believed. I talk to high school kids who have no
clue who Eisenhower was, or what the Federalist papers are, or why Vietnam
happened or even where it is and what it was. We teach to the test and no one
learns. As Richard Feynman once pointed out falsehood and evil can be taught as
easily as good and true. Unfortunately this is far too often the case.
Ignorance breeds contempt and hatred. If you do not
understand people who look, feel, or love differently than you it is easy to
hate them. Not taking the time to learn about another’s religion has been the cause
of more death that anything in the history of the world. Ignorance is the cause
of evil and evil in and of itself. It lacks any excuse as it is so easily
cured.
Which of course brings us to Descartes and his opining that “
I think therefore I am”. Many people better hope this is not so because if this
maxim is true they simply aren’t.
The highest forms of understanding we can achieve are
laughter and human compassion.
This one comes from one would assume to be an unlikely source
for such a touchy feeling statement. Those who toil in the world of physics and
science are not usually noted for things like laughter and compassion. Of course
most them do not play the bongo drums or hang out doing equations in strip clubs
like Richard Feynman did either. The man who exposed cargo culture, worked on
the atomic bomb and figured out why the space shuttle exploded was one of the
greatest thinkers of this or any other age. Along with the hard science he figured
out the physics was not the most important thing. Love and compassion are. The
book of his letters over the years, Perfectly Reasonable deviations, shows a
deeply compassionate and passionate man.
The lack of compassion in the world bothers me deeply. We
hate what we do not understand and even the simplest forms of polite behavior
escape so many today. Why snap at the
clerk who made a simple error instead of understanding that no one is perfect and he may be having a very bad day of her own. Maybe that waitress that was a
little slow with your food is working a double shift to pay medical bills for a
sick child who is home with a sitter. I guarantee you that homeless person you
stepped over is not having a great fucking day and is not worthy of your anger
and disgust. I wrote the following a few years ago on the subject of compassion
and it seems unnecessary to reinvent the wheel:
This is something that those of us who call ourselves
libertarians fuck up beyond belief. While I deeply believe that government
redistribution of wealth, uneven taxation and handouts is wrong this does not
mean that there should be no compassion. Believing in myself and taking
responsibility does not excuse me from giving a shit about those with whom I
share the planet. I should not have an obligation to give my money to anyone I
do not want to. However I should want to help some of those who have struggled
along the way. If life has smiled on you why not help those who feel frowned
upon right now.
Why not give money to help spread literacy? We have far too
many people in our own country that never learned to read. What contribution
might they make to the world or their own life if we open that door for them?
Is giving the mentally handicapped the chance for a job or the ability to take
some measure of direction over their life a handout or a hand up? Do you know
what horrible circumstances led that mother and child to be homeless? Are you
so perfect you get to judge? The five bucks you give her might go to the crack
pipe, that’s true. It might go to feed the child for a day. Since you tip more
than that for an overcooked burger and a beer at the bar why do you give a
shit? The chance she feeds the baby is worth taking the risk in my feeble mind.
You are right. I do not owe it to anyone to help them. I owe it to myself.
Buy the Ticket, take the Ride.
This of course comes from one of the greatest philosophers
of the second half of the 20th century Hunter S. Thompson. You may
not agree with all the choices the good doctor made but you cannot deny that he
rode the ride of life about as fast and as far as anyone possibly could. He figured
out early that you could embrace life and live on your own terms or hunker down
in fear and settle for the middle mundane path. He took the ride.
The ride of life is right there but you do have to buy the
ticket. You cannot be afraid to try. To risk, to love, to laugh, to scream down
your fears and delight in the high speed passage is to really experience life.
You cannot live a loveless life in which you take no risks, try nothing new,
not laugh at the absurdity of it all and say you have lived. To truly live is
not for the timid but it is the right way to live.
As the poet Baudelaire advised be drunk on life, on wine on virtue
and on poetry.” So as not to be the martyred slaves of time, be drunk, be
continually drunk! On wine, on poetry or on virtue as you wish." Drink of life with great thirst and slam the
glass down spilling drops of grape in all directions and demand more. Odds are
you will get it.
We are more often
frightened than hurt; and we suffer more from imagination than from reality.
As someone who was tied up with Caligula, Claudius and Nero
Seneca The Younger had to have learned plenty about fear. The poor bastardy was
constantly being exiled or accused of some damn thing or another. But somewhere
along the way he gave many nuggets of wisdom and this is probably his most
important of all.
Fear is the fucker of life. Fear will freeze you, bind you
and keep you from being who you can be and gaining what you desire. It is the
bully in the playground and the bouncer in the bar of life. I have seen people
walk away from incredible opportunities because they were scared to leave their
nine to five job they hated. I have seen people not ask out their dream girl
for fear she would say no. I have seen people pass up on so much of life
because they were afraid of the unknown. I have known people who lose sleep
because they are afraid of this or that or the other. Fear unconquered is a
waste of time and killer of life.
Here is the thing about life. Sometimes it sucks and bad
things happen. They just do even to nice people who go to church and help the
poor. Now I have always lived fairly aggressively from the days of my misspent
youth up through today I have had lots of bad things happen. I have had people
I cared about die. I have been fired. I have lost all my money. Not so long ago
I had the IRS take all my money. I have been beat up. I have been locked up a
time or thirty in youth. I have had my heart broken. I have had horrible
mistakes. I have had friends steal from me. I have broken bones, stubbed toes
and everything in between happen. They all hurt. They all heal. Here’s the
thing about bad shit and why you should not be afraid of it. If it happens and doesn’t
kill you, you get over it and can recover. If it kills you, you won’t care anymore
anyway. If it doesn’t happen you spent a lot of time being afraid of the boogie
man for no damn reason.
If I let fear dictate my life I would have never quit my job
as a broker and found a career I really love. If I let the broken hearts of the
past keep from loving I never would have found Erin and the happiness we have
found together. If I was afraid to drink too much I never would have had
children. If past injustices made me harden my heart I would not have all the
friends I have today. Bad shit does happen but so does good shit. Money can be
made back. Love can be found and life can be worth living. But if you are
afraid to try none of the good shit can happen.
I am by no means a great philosopher but I have learned a
few things along the way.
History will not recall me as they do Cato the younger, the
older or even Cato the village idiot but I have learned a few things along the way
that have served me well and seem worth mentioning.
It costs nothing to be kind most of the time.
Love does indeed matter more than physics, markets, business
and even baseball.
Read a lot. Read everything.
Be open to other points of view. Be honest with yourself that
given all the stupid shit you have done no one else knows about and admit there
is no way you have figured out everything. Don’t fall into the “not invented
here” syndrome. Other people have good ideas too and there are lots of people
smarter than me and you.
Live with abandon. Don’t be afraid of anything but the
mediocre and the mundane.
Be responsible for yourself, your failures and mistakes as
well as your successes.
Unless they piss in your drink, over tip.
Educated risks where you have a definable edge are not
gambling. Go for it. If you lose go for it again as long as the edge exists.
If you can help someone, do it.
Try not to fuck up any more people than you have to as you
go through life. You will make mistakes and hurt people; it is part of being
alive. Try not to do it too much.
Don’t let fear dictate your choices. As I said If it doesn’t
kill you, you can recover .If it kills you, you won’t care anymore
Once in a while throw a bum $20 without worrying how they
spend it. To be honest if they are down to living on the streets booze might be
the best expenditure for them.
Read some more.
Wine polishes the good and blunts the bad.
Baseball is the game of the mind and worth watching often
A good spouse makes
the journey livable. A great one makes it a sparkling journey of excitement and
passion. Thankfully I have a great one.
Be skeptical of self-proclaimed geniuses. Quite often they
are just undiscovered idiots.
Never trade your
dreams for someone elses.
Don’t worry what other people think. Worry what you think
and how you feel about your actions.
Live on your own terms and do what you will with your life
with great passion and effort.
Keep in mind your right to happiness ends where the other
guys starts. You can’t find your dream by crushing someone else’s.
Be fucking nice when you can.
Avoid all idiots, charlatans, fools and imbeciles. Should
they wander into your life remove them, violently if necessary. Ignorance is
not only evil it is often contagious.
Read.
Learn from Ben Graham. Not just in picking stocks but in his
desire to do something foolish, something creative, and something generous. In a lifetime
of saying some really smart things this is the smartest he ever said.
Read
Love
Risk
Live.
2 comments:
Actually, Tim, one of your best - pondering philosophy suits your kind of thinking - you need to take this to another level. It certainly demonstrates the "wanderings of an amorous and avaricious mind."
Hey Tim, are you familiar with Albert Camus, and his take on Sisyphus? Just wondering
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