The Will :up:
Does any of that help at all? — Ludwig V
Interesting perspective. I'm not sure I am any closer to believing that will is the key ingredient in people's success. The fact that some people can set or achieve goals is down to lots of factors. When we are successful, we like to think it's because we have innate capacity or determination. Luck plays a role too.
The basics of motivation are values and reason, which together make up a practical syllogism. That seems quite clear — Ludwig V
I'm believe that people often don't know what they want or what they are doing. Even those who appear to set goals and achieve success. I worked with a man who was a wealthy and successful lawyer. All the plans he ever made he achieved - from landing the right university, to getting a gig in the right law firm; the obligatory luxury cars and home. But at 47, he was consumed by despair and found himself to be a failure. Turns out what he really wanted to do was be an artist. He was propelled into law by family expectations and the system of privilege he grew up in. I suspect many people live similar lives of superficial success which are based on confusion and a lack of insight into their own values and needs.
How do you feel about certainty then? Do people have different capacities for certainty? — Pantagruel
Not sure how these are connected. It seems to me that certainty is often the product of ignorance (e.g., Dunning–Kruger) or confidence, education, gender, anti-social behaviour, upbringing, etc.
And yet the more absurd the belief, the more ferociously people will commit, you see it everywhere. — Pantagruel
Indeed. I think fear may be a central factor. People embrace certainty as it assists them to feel safe and act in a world which seems dangerous. It provides them with an identity, with predictability and compass points by which to navigate life. Hence the seductive nature of fundamentalisms.