Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

I Like to Philosophize

The "self" is a very fragile and maluable thing, but there are certain points in every self that are almost immovable once set in place for long enough.

We see this in fundamentalists who attack the ideology of another rather than think critically of both sides.
A mechanism being the protection of the emotional well-being of the "self" persona by destroying symbols of what opposes the value structure that gives creedence to it's existence.
Thus why people are willing to kill over an idea, as to face the possible fallacy of the building blocks that make up the basis of their reality would be like death.

The mask would be broken, then there is just their being without a constructed self to function or navigate through the world. The support for determining meaning and perceiving the world would be nulified and the mind would go into panic and anxiety.
So we see increasing ideological tribalism and identitarianism, even more so with the vast scale of instant sharing of information.

To be an individual might be only possible to a small extent due to our ideas and values being a collection of those before us and what is presented and valued in the present, but it's the only real freedom one can have if it is at all possible outside of just being a variation of a collection of ideas.

The only way may be through critical thought in all areas, almost to nihilism, and this is the most distressing and uncomfortable place a self can find itself in. But then to be a "true" individual would be to become a brick wall to all external influence which is impossible. But a person could still be as much as an individual as they possibly can, and that it something which should be pursued.

my head hurts
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
Peaceful · F
The "self" has been made fragile by being taught from a young age to seek outside oneself. I do not mean the nurturing of a parent.

I mean seeking answers outside oneself, which media, education, the medical field trains us to do.

To be clear, I'm not placing blame on anything I have listed, (just part of a system of indictrination). Cartoons, advertising, all have the same goals in mind. To believe and buy into what they are selling.

We no longer are taught to think independently in a world where information is literally seconds away with a mere Google search...or if you are more cautious, DuckDuckGo.

Instead, we are spoon-fed our beliefs and ideaoligies, our insecurities and prejudices and what happens next? We conform. We never think to question. We as insecure people, aim to hopefully "fit in".

We are meant to unlearn this. Sadly, most feel more comfortable in the bubble they were grown in, rather than exploring the truth.

Truth is different for many. And that can be a very good thing.


But when our illusion of truth aligns with indoctrination and fear? Well that was never truth to begin with.
Ryannnnnn · 31-35, M
@Peaceful I moved away from google myself and onto duck.

It's like using idealogies and values for creating "genes" that are passed on through time and certain ones are selected by society or those who distrubute or control information for the pro-longed evolution and existence of the collective.
Which mimics natural selection, but it's an artificial one. Though we could make the argument that we are itself nature and what we do is an extention of nature in a more complex form.

It's like as the tribe becomes larger, the accepted ideas within it become more and more compressed and we lose our autonomy as individuals. Then the smaller factions that have fractioned off within it become more violent and desperate in response. It's like a spiral that is only going to get worse with increased dependence.

That's why the need for a balance between individual and collective is crucial right now, without critical thought in this environment where biasees infects everything around us in the form of fake news and opinionated conclusions there will only be more violence and unhappiness.
Peaceful · F
@Ryannnnnn I'm all for genuine passing of thoughts, no matter how arbitrary if we go back through history. We come from a place where we had no idea about germs, promoted cocaine and cigarettes not that long ago as something that helped or heals.

We have now gone in the opposite direction to think that all germs are evil, as one small example. Viruses too now are vilified, microbiome has largely been ignored. And why is this? A short answer would be lack of profits, but I digress.

We become more violent, disconnected because we've been taught not to trust ourselves, take meds that have no long term studies, and willfully put things into our bodies because profits deem it so.

Collective to me is aiming for the genuine greater good of others, even those we may not understand.

Unfortunately, collective these days has been hijacked and become a herd mentality that once new evidence, (new information we are just learning) turns into cognitive dissonance and we shut down and attack. This too has been intentionally taught.
Ryannnnnn · 31-35, M
@Peaceful There's certain pros and cons that come with the nature of the collective, without it we would live in anarchy as a lot of our values that are beneficial to our continued existence has been passed on for that very reason. There are certain human social constants of course in nature but we're "nudged" towards certain preferences.
It is social engineering, whether it's ethical or neccesary is another question.

Agreed, it's interesting looking into the nature why so then we truly understand why we feel such a way. Then once this awareness is there we can make more constructive reponses and not go into "attack" mode when faced with something that disagrees with our preferencial reality. Even if certain beliefs can't be undone, at the very least people can learn to be more conscious of themselves and thus more free to think and be less effected.

I'll avoid getting into the pros and cons of capitalism as thats a discussion for another time.. and i really need coffee..
Peaceful · F
@Ryannnnnn enjoy your cuppa. I deeply enjoyed your post and our dialogue. 🤗
Ryannnnnn · 31-35, M
@Peaceful Thanks, and likewise.
We'll talk another time 🙂