Individual ‘A’ ... the individual concerned is characterised by a consistently benign and tolerant disposition towards others – he has an instinctive tendency towards empathy and an alive awareness of the poignancy that can be involved in the predicament of those more unfortunate than himself – he nonetheless is somewhat aimless and apathetic in his general outlook towards life and utterly devoid of ambition so that consequently, regardless of whatever talents he might happen to possess... He will never suspect or aspire towards anything beyond his harmless, routine and mundane environ and is in practice content to make it through life merely as an untroubling and unquestioning follower. — Robert Lockhart
Individual ‘B’ ... He is, firstly, psychologically stable... He was ambitious and soon became cognizant of the world existing out with his own birth environment, and such ambition then acted to motivate his personal industry so that now his situation is a socially and economically dominant one. He has his beautiful 'trophy' wife and... he privately relishes the opportunities his status now affords to belittle and humiliate those inescapably dependent for their survival on his patronage - and these experiences now further inform his attitude of general disdain towards others, acting to fuel his appetite for yet greater advancement together with the potential for absolute intimidating dominance likely to be enabled, which ever more now motivates his (privately grotesqe) 'barage-baloon' ego! His life he feels, is absolutely superb and he perceives the prospects likely ahead for him to be absolutely wonderful! — Robert Lockhart
Anyway, I think you imply a significant point – the paradox that in practice a human being can be either happier, or conversely unhappier than he personally believes himself to be. Regarding this idea, we are all of course capable of rationally acknowledging the received truth – as distinct from personaly bearing a psychological witness towards it - that the gratification of pleasure, both physical and psychological (psychological in terms of the elevation of personal vanity and the massaging of the ego) is capable of presenting to an individual a prospect of happiness which effectively is a mirage, so that if the experience of the individual concerned was deficient, and therefore he had no other reference point with regard to which to evaluate this semblance before him, he would most likely be persuaded of its plausibility. — Robert Lockhart
Having been hurt quite incredibly by people who completely refuse to acknowledge or even apologise, on the contrary, found it justifiable to hurt and humiliate me, it does cast a great shadow of doubt that the likelihood of such a recovery is minimal, but indeed, should they feel a sense of guilt and remorse they would truly able to "see me" as I say, something they are blind too. They become honest to themselves.... such revelations sometimes conferring a surprisingly affirmative realisation and, sometimes, a sense of regret and remorse regarding the irrecoverable nihilisms of the past but, more importantly, assuming such experience was valid, also an increased awareness of those objective moral values on which – so we are instructed anyway - sustainable contentment is ultimately contingent! — Robert Lockhart
Haha, well admitting it is a good start. Life is full of blunders, it is what makes it interesting. Better than those living day to day in a repetitive life that is just barely satisfying as long as it is safe and like everyone else.Haven't yet managed personally however to attain that Nirvana by educating myself out of envy for what I, of course, perceive to be the undeserved success in relation to my own efforts of others! :) — Robert Lockhart
I think it boils down to accessibility and just like the field of science and engineering, philosophy has never been promoted as an accessible study to women due to a culture of gender bias. Promotion and accessibility is changing this but for me, well, I was initially compelled to philosophy as a way to articulate the difficulties that I was experiencing, since I grew up and spent most of my life alone and under difficult circumstances. I picked up an old, second-hand book when I was 15 - The Last Days of Socrates - that I read on a long train ride from the country to the city and was amazed at how some of the wisdom within it made sense of certain ideas that I had been thinking and thus my journey started.Timeline: - Without intending to be patronising – it’s refreshing to hear a female voice, for a change, in this forum! I’ve always been a bit curious as to why most philosophy sites don’t appear to have that many female members! (Though who knows what is disguised, both nefarious and worthy, behind the pseudonyms by which we choose to publicly represent ourselves!) — Robert Lockhart
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