>:O I'm exactly the same as you. If I find out something like that about a thinker, I'm much less tempted to investigate deeper what s/he said. If it couldn't help him live a good, moral life, why should I expect it to help me?But, eventually, I find out something about them that makes me lose interest...
w/ Ghandi and Tolstoy, it was their views towards sex. — anonymous66
Yeah, I'm like that too. My interest in, for example, Krishnamurti significantly decreased after I found out he had sex with his friend's wife (Rosalind), and secretly made her have an abortion.If I find out the person was married and unfaithful, that changes things for me as well. — anonymous66
If it wouldn't be too much to ask, could you PM me that list, I'd also be interested! :PAnyway, I've started making a list of people who I still admire, because I didn't find anything that gave me pause. — anonymous66
What about people like:So far, the people who make that list are:
Gabriel Marcel
C.S. Lewis — anonymous66
Absolutely! Any kind of significant immorality (killing innocent people, cruelty, vindictiveness, adultery and fornication, etc.) would turn me off.If you like a writer/philosopher/historical figure, are there things about their personal life that would turn you off? — anonymous66
I'm exactly the same as you. If I find out something like that about a thinker, I'm much less tempted to investigate deeper what s/he said. If it couldn't help him live a good, moral life, why should I expect it to help me? — Agustino
It depends on a few circumstances. For example, if he came up with the idea after he had committed whatever sin is in question, and after he repented of it, then it probably wouldn't. This isn't the case with the example of Krishnamurti that I gave - he kept it hidden his entire life, all the while preaching honesty. That's a problem. It tells me that he used those tools of thinking that he was advocating, and he himself couldn't be honest by using them. Why should I expect myself to succeed with what he had to offer?Does a wise idea lose it's credibility if the speaker can't uphold the idea? Think of Solomon. — Noble Dust
Oh yeah, and he cheated on his wives too!Bertrand Russell founded analytic philosophy and sat in jail for his opposition to WWI — absoluteaspiration
No, I'm saying I don't expect to succeed if I try to practice honesty using the tools K. advocated. In other words, he cannot help me become a better moral person (more honest).So you're saying you don't expect to succeed if you try to practice honesty? — Noble Dust
No, I'm saying I don't expect to succeed if I try to practice honesty using the tools K. advocated. In other words, he cannot help me become a better moral person (more honest). — Agustino
Practicing choiceless awareness, trying to rely solely on oneself and not on traditions, etc.What were those specific tools then? — Noble Dust
It's not that I dismiss their ideas altogether. I just don't see them as someone I want to emulate. — anonymous66
I think they do. Supporting a war in theory - or in writing - directly harms nobody. Adultery and fornication directly harm several people, and you are the proximal, efficient cause of that harm. Not to mention that it shows quite badly on you - you can't even control your lusts. So I think it's quite serious.But even if I were against it in all situations, I would still say that level of commitment in opposition to unjust war is on a different scale of moral courage than minor sexual infractions. Do those even count when compared side by side? — absoluteaspiration
What about people like:
Epictetus
Marcus Aurelius
Socrates
Musonius Rufus
Epicurus (I know he was supposedly a hedonist but he lived an exemplary life by most accounts)
Aquinas
G.K. Chesterton
Blaise Pascal
Sören Kierkegaard
Immanuel Kant — Agustino
I know you didn't ask me this, but no.Does Chesterton's support of WWI not move you the tiniest bit? — absoluteaspiration
I'll have to look into that.Does Chesterton's support of WWI not move you the tiniest bit? — absoluteaspiration
I'm not even sure that I would even label the behavior... It's more like that I'm looking for someone whose life I wouldn't mind modeling my life after... and when I find out certain things about certain possible role models, I think, "I couldn't do that."Fair enough, but you did say in the OP that you've "lost interest" in some of them, presumably because of their failings. — Noble Dust
Is there enough time though to test all ideas? There should be a screening method you know :Pwhether they're applicable to life should avail itself of your own experience of testing them, not to mention your own wisdom. — Noble Dust
What did you find problematic with their views towards sex? (I'm just asking cause I never looked into their views on sex before)w/ Ghandi and Tolstoy, it was their views towards sex — anonymous66
I like some Stoic ideas about changing what you can and accepting the rest, but their theories of what it is possible to change were seriously flawed and turned them into obsequious supporters of traditional power.Epictetus
Marcus Aurelius
Socrates
Musonius Rufus
Epicurus (I know he was supposedly a hedonist but he lived an exemplary life by most accounts)
Aquinas
G.K. Chesterton
Blaise Pascal
Sören Kierkegaard
Immanuel Kant — Agustino
Okay, I see. Thanks for sharing that link!You've got to look into it.
Tolstoy was convinced sex was bad... but, he kept having kids. And blamed his wife for seducing him.
Ghandi would sleep w/ young naked women just to prove he wouldn't be tempted.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/thrill-of-the-chaste-the-truth-about-gandhis-sex-life-1937411.html — anonymous66
Not all people are meant to marry. K. knew that if he had married he would have to abandon his devotion to God and to philosophy.Look, I have nothing against bachelorhood, but having a lady love, believing in marriage and never proposing to her? — absoluteaspiration
>:O So what? There's not much to get out of life anyway.If I force myself to come up with a criticism, I can't deny the dude lived his life like a wind up toy. — absoluteaspiration
I'm not a Catholic ;)Isn't he on the Catholic banned books list? — absoluteaspiration
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