I think you protest too much. I think you admire Baden's definition of Happiness in a sentence. — Amity
Sing, little child, sing! And one day the ogre will sing with you and set you free... — Baden
I think you protest too much. — Amity
I think you admire Baden's definition of Happiness in a sentence.
I think you would love the chance to get right in there and rip it up.
But I could be wrong :wink: — Amity
I give up on women. :cry: — Purple Pond
Now that made me happy. Reading something beautifully expressed and creatively philosophical that made me think, nod a little in the right way, and is clearly from a position of life experience. No references to a particular philosopher, book or encyclopedia but a distillation of many. Probably. — Amity
Of course you know why that is, don't you ?
https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/how-does-a-word-get-into-the-dictionary
Dictionaries or encyclopedias are useful as a first point for clarification. Often you find more meanings than you first thought. A definition which mirrors your intended meaning in a discussion is a great way to lessen any misunderstandings.
What is wonderful about our thinking and language is that it can change. It is not static.
New words like 'meme' or - Daniel Dennett's 'deepity'.
And sometimes that is what philosophy is too good at. With some making up their own words for same meaning. It can be a bit of a pain in the neck... — Amity
Wait. How dare you? — S
My pronouns are ze/zir. — S
I'd like to see a discussion about happiness that deals with two main approaches, namely materialism vs meaning, with participants arguing which is better or is more likely to lead to happiness. — praxis
I'd like to see a discussion about happiness that deals with two main approaches, namely materialism vs meaning, with participants arguing which is better or is more likely to lead to happiness.
— praxis
That is closer to my original idea about what makes people happy than trying to find better ways to explain what exactly happiness is. We know already, thanks to "S", the definition of happiness so lets look at the good and bad of making people happy.
Example:
Is it correct(moral) to give a 16 year old a shotgun for his/her birthday if it makes her/him happy? — Sir2u
A promising topic imo. — Baden
Well, the originality required is just that you don't repeat a topic that's already active. And there are none active on this topic. In fact, I have yet to see a particularly impressive OP on happiness. — Baden
Either way, you will still need to define what you mean by being or doing 'happy' or 'Happiness'.
I like the specific focus of your suggested discussion. Specifics, like that, could arise or spin off from unpacking the general definition of Baden:The definitions were only to be there as a starter.
What do you think ? — Amity
We can have our cake and eat it too! It can be partly exploratory, and partly a thesis. I mean we can make conclusions on what we know about happiness, and leave some wiggle room for some exploratory content, for example, the part of happiness that we are not sure about.Some good thoughts regarding structure. Intro, main body, conclusion. But it sounds a bit like we are producing an essay for academic purposes. Perhaps that is what is required, but it's not what I was thinking of as an exploratory discussion. I need to think more about this. There would be no foregone conclusion. That might come at the end of the process. — Amity
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