I think this story (and others) had a hand in shaping my imagination of a hermit as a somewhat crazy, wise man in general. But is that accurate? Is it crazy to want constant solitude from other humans, or to create your own ideal, imaginary friend to argue with? Or, is it more like running away? — John Days
Schopenhauer would say that becoming a hermit-ascetic would be the ultimate goal in purging the Will for good. It is the only road that leads to full denial of the Will. — schopenhauer1
Hermit-ascetic life seems to require a lot of will power. — litewave
Ask a psychologist. — Gotterdammerung
t there was this part about a guy who became a hermit. — John Days
One who argues and/or consults with only oneself cannot possibly learn about their own mistakes. That takes an other. — creativesoul
It may be crazy, but it is also very common. — Bitter Crank
Schopenhauer would say that becoming a hermit-ascetic would be the ultimate goal in purging the Will for good. — schopenhauer1
To be a hermit is a strange path to wisdom. Isn't there value in the sharing of ideas? — TheMadFool
But what's the point of sharing ideas with people don't listen? — John Days
Listening to others is more important than others listening to you. — TheMadFool
and that usually requires hearing the other side which isn't possible in solitude. — TheMadFool
As I said before, hermitic life is an after kinda thing - it can only be fruitful after you've seen the world. — TheMadFool
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