I don't see anything in there about the need to prove boredom exist. — Jeremiah
In your article they say, " which springs from failures in one of the brain's attention networks." That says nothing about it being an emotion. You keep calling it an emotion, but you have not provided any supporting data for doing so. — Jeremiah
And can you prove this? Or can you even prove that humans have a "baseline mental state"? — Jeremiah
If I am being honest, I am having a hard time remembering the last time I was genuinely bored, which would suggest to me that it is not my "default" position. But I can't judge the nature of all humans based on my single experience; for all I know I may be abnormal. — Jeremiah
Well, I have driven a car and that hardly makes me a mechanic. Likewise being bored does not make you a neuroscientist or a psychologist. I am sorry, but simply because you have a human brain, that does not mean you necessarily understand how it works. Your OP was very much opinion, and there is nothing wrong with opinions, but they should be supported by more substantial information. — Jeremiah
Just because it does not conflict that doesn't make it correct or accurate. If we accept what John Eastwood and Theodor Lipps describe there is a conflicting state of wants that was not addressed in your OP. This part "Boredom is felt when one's attention is not focused on any particular task" would need further validation; I simply don't accept it. And this part here "can originate from a lack of stimulating things to do" is at the very least incomplete; if we are accepting that boredom is a conflict of wants, or a conflict of a want and a lack of. — Jeremiah
Boredom means, in a way, that you are not interesting, because something external must stimulate you to make living worthwhile for you. True interest comes from within, nowhere else. — The Great Whatever
Yeah, I agree with that. That was part of what I was getting at. And I think most folks, as they age, learn how to find very small, subtle things interesting. Of course, babies and toddlers are typically like that, too, so a lot of people kind of grow out of it when they're kids but grow back into it when they're adults. — Terrapin Station
Replying to your ninja edit.
Up is a direction orientated to my physical location (or whatever point you choose). Natural and unnatural is just an subjective view, which varies from person to person. But up will always be up, as long as you are orientated the same way I am, and that does not change if you call it down, left, right or chicken. However, the meaning of natural and unnatural varies from person to person, and there is no objective measurement for it. — Jeremiah
After a certain time, eventually all people will get bored though, no matter what the thresholds are. — schopenhauer1
4) Instrumentality- always becoming and never being. The absurd feeling one gets..the exhaustion of existence as there is no completion.. just more goals to pursue (see the 1 above) and time to fill because we are alive and there is no other choice. The world-weariness of seeing the same basic thing in different arrangements day in and day out. — schopenhauer1
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