Sceptic has been slacking in terms of giving us opening segments recently. So we have to turn to that other gold mine, eon magazine. Even though they give us fodder sometimes for what our ludicrous claims, it's never its. It's rarely not interesting, and it's rarely poorly written. The title is, imagine there's no jealousy. Imagine there's no lousy. Why we should understand jealousy as nothing more than a vice that ought to be replaced by the new virtue of compersion. Tambler, i've never heard that word. Well, we'll talk about the word its origin this very soon. How oud you descobit? What's the abstract
David and Tamler dive into the book of Ecclesiastes, an absurdist classic that is somehow also a book of the Bible. Is everything meaningless, vain, and a chasing after the wind? Are humans just the same as animals? Are wise people no better off than fools? Will God judge us after we die, rewarding the good people and punishing the shit-heels? What if there is no afterlife and this is all we get? How should we deal with our pointless, unjust existence? Plus we return to our opening-segment bible— Aeon—and talk about an argument for replacing jealousy with...wait for it…compersion.
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