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|    alt.philosophy    |    Didn't Freud have sex with his mother?    |    170,335 messages    |
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|    Message 168,807 of 170,335    |
|    Ilya Shambat to All    |
|    Wisdom and suffering    |
|    20 Nov 23 19:37:50    |
      From: ibshambat@gmail.com              When I was 16, as a student at a Christian school I had a conversation with my       mother about what I called common human nature. She told me that there was no       such thing, and that she never wanted to hurt anyone.              I realized that she was right.              At this point in my life I have no ill will toward anyone. Clearly there are       times when people need to be faced with consequences of their actions, and       clearly there are times when people need to act in wiser ways. That does not       mean that they have to        suffer. It means that they need to make better decisions.              In most cases, when someone is doing the wrong thing, it should be possible to       convince him that he is doing the wrong thing. When their children do things       wrong, many parents punish them when what they really need to do is explain to       the child why what        the child is doing is wrong. In most cases the child will understand and react       accordingly.              The suffering is not the point. Wisdom is. Sometimes it takes suffering to       achieve wisdom, and sometimes it doesn’t. My daughter hasn’t had much       suffering in her life, but she has always been very wise. Her first social       interaction was coming up to        another little girl and hugging her. When I talked to her about yuckie people       she said, “There are no yuckie people.” Here is someone who has achieved       wisdom without suffering. Whereas there are many people who suffer who       aren’t wise at all.              Does suffering lead to wisdom? Sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn’t.       Once again, there are times when people need to be faced with consequences of       their actions; but in many other cases it is possible to achieve the same       result with persuasion.        Suffering, in itself, should not be encouraged. Wisdom should be. And that can       be achieved with or without suffering.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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