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Provoked by watching a documentary on Uri Geller and reading about a friend's pre-menstrual moods.

We want to believe that Uri Geller can bend spoons because we want to believe that things can happen because we want them to.
We are disturbed by hormonal mood-swings because we want to believe that our emotions are a reliable reflection of our experiences, or because we don't like the idea that we can't control.
As Epictetus said, there are things which are in our hands, and things which aren't. But distinguishing between the two is tricky.

reality

Date: 2004-10-23 06:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] maggie-lucy.livejournal.com
When I was a student I read Locke & Plato & consorted with physicists. They all led me to question reality & I became unsure of my existence. This was depressing - we do like to feel in charge, if not of our fate, at least that of our own reality. Perhaps my mother's no-nonsense - roll up your sleeves & get on with it (whatever 'it' was) , or the nasty sense of imminent death on a shaky belay & 300' of cliff below could have brought a change of perspective. My surroudings & life events seem to have some consistency, & among the figments of imagination (such as friends, lovers, tutors, landladies) there seemed to be consensus, so I might as well like it or lump it, if you'll excuse these technical terms, & get on with my life.

Re: reality

Date: 2004-10-24 09:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] solri.livejournal.com
It's surprising the effect Locke can have on young minds. I didn't read any of the Essay Concerning Human Understanding till I did my MA, and by this time I'd already been through Zen, the Doctrine of the Void etc., so it didn't strike me as anything earth-shattering, but one of my students last year read it while doing my Matrix course, and it blew his mind!

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Robin Turner

June 2014

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