Quote from: Aether on April 15, 2018, 12:03:40 PMQuote from: Shhhhhh on April 15, 2018, 11:11:29 AMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 11:01:21 AMThe pay-off is discipline and self-worth.the payoff is also exhaustion, misery, and age—oftentimes in greater amountsHard work doesn't make a person inherently miserable. There are many people that are miserable when they aren't working hard.i'm really not sure where you're getting that from my postall i did was express the very real possibility that working hard has its adverse effects—you may be some fucking weirdo who actually likes doing work or some shit, but not everybody is youthat's all i'm saying
Quote from: Shhhhhh on April 15, 2018, 11:11:29 AMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 11:01:21 AMThe pay-off is discipline and self-worth.the payoff is also exhaustion, misery, and age—oftentimes in greater amountsHard work doesn't make a person inherently miserable. There are many people that are miserable when they aren't working hard.
Quote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 11:01:21 AMThe pay-off is discipline and self-worth.the payoff is also exhaustion, misery, and age—oftentimes in greater amounts
The pay-off is discipline and self-worth.
Quote from: Shhhhhh on April 15, 2018, 12:08:13 PMQuote from: Aether on April 15, 2018, 12:03:40 PMQuote from: Shhhhhh on April 15, 2018, 11:11:29 AMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 11:01:21 AMThe pay-off is discipline and self-worth.the payoff is also exhaustion, misery, and age—oftentimes in greater amountsHard work doesn't make a person inherently miserable. There are many people that are miserable when they aren't working hard.i'm really not sure where you're getting that from my postall i did was express the very real possibility that working hard has its adverse effects—you may be some fucking weirdo who actually likes doing work or some shit, but not everybody is youthat's all i'm saying I'm not talking about me, I'm not a particularly industrious person, but the way you talk makes it sound like misery is an inevitability with hard work.
Quote from: Aether on April 15, 2018, 12:13:59 PMQuote from: Shhhhhh on April 15, 2018, 12:08:13 PMQuote from: Aether on April 15, 2018, 12:03:40 PMQuote from: Shhhhhh on April 15, 2018, 11:11:29 AMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 11:01:21 AMThe pay-off is discipline and self-worth.the payoff is also exhaustion, misery, and age—oftentimes in greater amountsHard work doesn't make a person inherently miserable. There are many people that are miserable when they aren't working hard.i'm really not sure where you're getting that from my postall i did was express the very real possibility that working hard has its adverse effects—you may be some fucking weirdo who actually likes doing work or some shit, but not everybody is youthat's all i'm saying I'm not talking about me, I'm not a particularly industrious person, but the way you talk makes it sound like misery is an inevitability with hard work.i mean in some ways i think it isi think those who work and aren't miserable are either stupid or fooling themselves
I don't buy it. Not every person is the same, and I think an industrious person that stays true to who they are will relish in working hard. As a creative and open person, what gives meaning to my life and makes it engaging for me is creating art in some form. When I observe someone industrious, they seem have the same relationship with work. If they weren't able to work as they wished I believe it would be similar to if I was unable to create, which would be certain misery and hopeless nihilism.
It's very obvious that you aren't an industrious person so I'm not sure why you would assume that someone who is would have the same relationship with work as you do.
Quote from: Aether on April 15, 2018, 12:37:23 PMI don't buy it. Not every person is the same, and I think an industrious person that stays true to who they are will relish in working hard. As a creative and open person, what gives meaning to my life and makes it engaging for me is creating art in some form. When I observe someone industrious, they seem have the same relationship with work. If they weren't able to work as they wished I believe it would be similar to if I was unable to create, which would be certain misery and hopeless nihilism.you never contradicted me herei already covered stupid people in my post, and that's where i file "industrious people"i consider being "industrious" a sign of lower intelligence—you HAVE to be an idiot to enjoy workQuoteIt's very obvious that you aren't an industrious person so I'm not sure why you would assume that someone who is would have the same relationship with work as you do.i don'thence why they're idiots and i'm not
Well those supposed "idiots" are what makes our society function. They're the reason you have running water and electricity. They're the people who would save your life were you trapped in a burning building or had been critically injured in some accident. They're the one's who make sure the streets aren't littered with garbage and that our cities aren't decadent. In fact, they're the one's who actually build our cities in the first place.Your characterization of industrious people looks particularly foolish and ungrateful.
can you empirically PROVE that all of those things were built by people who enjoyed building them and never experienced an ounce of misery or tedium while doing sobecause i can guarantee that you're dead wrong—NONE of those people were or are industrious
Quote from: Aether on April 15, 2018, 02:41:51 PMYou can thank eastern philosophy for instilling me with a respect for the importance and benefits of hard work.What does this even mean?
You can thank eastern philosophy for instilling me with a respect for the importance and benefits of hard work.
I'm not speaking in absolutes, sorry if that isn't clear. I don't mean to say that every single person was happy the entire time they were working, or that every single person that helps keeps society running is industrious. I'm saying that some people work because it gives their life meaning and that without industrious people society would practically fall apart.
Nothing about this view is anything I hadn't already felt deep down long before I ever knew about JBP. You can thank eastern philosophy for instilling me with a respect for the importance and benefits of hard work.
Happiness is understanding and exploiting the game of biology and Verbatim refuses to play. That's it.
Quote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 02:26:14 PMHappiness is understanding and exploiting the game of biology and Verbatim refuses to play. That's it.We`re not talking about happiness, we`re talking about jobs. People usually take jobs because they need to survive, not because to be happy. Hobbies exist for happiness. Jobs exist for surviving. Thats it.
nobody "likes" work—you just have a bunch of people who either have 1.) an incredibly high work ethic to counteract their distaste for work, 2.) someone who's good at bullshitting themselves into a state of complacency, or 3.) they just have a very high tolerance for the oppressive nature of all labor
Quote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 02:57:36 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 02:26:14 PMHappiness is understanding and exploiting the game of biology and Verbatim refuses to play. That's it.We`re not talking about happiness, we`re talking about jobs. People usually take jobs because they need to survive, not because to be happy. Hobbies exist for happiness. Jobs exist for surviving. Thats it.You'll be depressed your entire life if you don't enjoy your job.
Quote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 03:02:10 PMQuote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 02:57:36 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 02:26:14 PMHappiness is understanding and exploiting the game of biology and Verbatim refuses to play. That's it.We`re not talking about happiness, we`re talking about jobs. People usually take jobs because they need to survive, not because to be happy. Hobbies exist for happiness. Jobs exist for surviving. Thats it.You'll be depressed your entire life if you don't enjoy your job.You are saying this like job is the only thing that exist in world
Quote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 03:05:57 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 03:02:10 PMQuote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 02:57:36 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 02:26:14 PMHappiness is understanding and exploiting the game of biology and Verbatim refuses to play. That's it.We`re not talking about happiness, we`re talking about jobs. People usually take jobs because they need to survive, not because to be happy. Hobbies exist for happiness. Jobs exist for surviving. Thats it.You'll be depressed your entire life if you don't enjoy your job.You are saying this like job is the only thing that exist in worldYour career pretty much dominates your life of a day-to-day basis, so naturally if you choose to view it as “slavery” it’s going to impact your happiness. Not a very practical mindset.
Quote from: maverick on April 15, 2018, 03:19:07 PMQuote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 03:05:57 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 03:02:10 PMQuote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 02:57:36 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 02:26:14 PMHappiness is understanding and exploiting the game of biology and Verbatim refuses to play. That's it.We`re not talking about happiness, we`re talking about jobs. People usually take jobs because they need to survive, not because to be happy. Hobbies exist for happiness. Jobs exist for surviving. Thats it.You'll be depressed your entire life if you don't enjoy your job.You are saying this like job is the only thing that exist in worldYour career pretty much dominates your life of a day-to-day basis, so naturally if you choose to view it as “slavery” it’s going to impact your happiness. Not a very practical mindset.And you are saying this like job takes majority of your career or all of it, while in reality it`s not exactly a true, expecially considering part-time jobs exist, distant jobs exist, basically jobs which doesn`t take all of your time and are enough for you to survive, pay bills or w/e exist
Quote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 03:33:24 PMQuote from: maverick on April 15, 2018, 03:19:07 PMQuote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 03:05:57 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 03:02:10 PMQuote from: MarKhan on April 15, 2018, 02:57:36 PMQuote from: Eli on April 15, 2018, 02:26:14 PMHappiness is understanding and exploiting the game of biology and Verbatim refuses to play. That's it.We`re not talking about happiness, we`re talking about jobs. People usually take jobs because they need to survive, not because to be happy. Hobbies exist for happiness. Jobs exist for surviving. Thats it.You'll be depressed your entire life if you don't enjoy your job.You are saying this like job is the only thing that exist in worldYour career pretty much dominates your life of a day-to-day basis, so naturally if you choose to view it as “slavery” it’s going to impact your happiness. Not a very practical mindset.And you are saying this like job takes majority of your career or all of it, while in reality it`s not exactly a true, expecially considering part-time jobs exist, distant jobs exist, basically jobs which doesn`t take all of your time and are enough for you to survive, pay bills or w/e existPart-time jobs, stay-at-home jobs, or even intermittent type work is still a significant amount of your life to choose to be miserable because of and this doesn’t undermine the point.
I never said that taking job is like choosing a slavery, I said that you take job for survival, because if not for survival, then why?