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1962 sats \ 2 replies \ @elvismercury 27 Dec 2023 \ parent \ on: What will be the THEME of your 2024? meta
Same.
Just listened to this podcast the other day on Socrates, which turned out to dig into something really thought-provoking wrt your point about the distance between your aspirations and reality. Normally I wouldn't have found this, as I know a lot about Socrates and Greek philosophical thought already, but this was from a new angle. Here's a taste:
Based on how many things you've said in the last few days have intersected stuff I care a lot about, there's a decent chance you may dig this podcast, too.
Thank you, I will for sure be listening to this. Great minds think alike ðŸ¤
I very much enjoy these kind of dichotomies, the philosophers, and the sophists. Still so relevant today, and perhaps we’re biased but bitcoiners feel like a great model of the blend that Socrates wanted.
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This looks fascinating thank you, I will give it a listen. I saw many people referencing this guy before but didn't know he had a podcast.
I'm reading "The web of meaning" right now by Jeremy Lent which is pretty much entirely focused on this integration topic. I don't know if I could recommend it yet as I'm only a quarter of the way through, maybe I'll write a review on SN later.
A little snippet:
While self-control has been shown to produce more successful life outcomes, if applied excessively, it doesn’t lead to sustained happiness. Rather, like an authoritarian regime forcing itself on a population, it might achieve apparent stability, but only at the cost of seething resentments that ultimately lead to acts of sabotage and potentially even revolution. Instead, establishing a more wholesome ‘democracy of consciousness’ can lead to both greater stability and a more peaceful inner experience.
The key to a successful democracy of consciousness is a full and ongoing integration of the different aspects of ‘I’ and the self. By welcoming and honoring the various needs and feelings of the self, ‘I’ am more able to incorporate them into the direction I set for my life. If I learn to listen carefully to the ‘wisdom of the body’, I can become a wiser person in the decisions I make and actions I take. At the same time, if the self recognizes that its needs are being acknowledged, it can also relax, and is less likely to sabotage the life that ‘I’ have constructed.
The relationship between ‘I’ and self is a bit like a partner dance set to the music of life. Each partner differs from the other, but can learn to attune to the other and respond harmoniously to the other’s moves, sometimes closing in, sometimes moving further away, sometimes setting a new tone and sometimes following the other’s lead, but always remaining in relationship – and rather than trying to dominate or surrender, coordinating with the other to co-create an experience that neither could ever attain by themselves.
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