If You Want A Reason To Live | Expect To Change Your Opinions
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Apr 7, 2025
Explore the beauty that surrounds us, especially in tough times. Embrace humility and question your assumptions to discover wisdom. The Dunning-Kruger effect reminds us that pride can hinder growth. Socratic inquiry encourages recognizing our ignorance as a vital step toward knowledge. Stay open to change and commit to lifelong learning—it's essential to avoid the trap of thinking you know it all!
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volunteer_activism ADVICE
Find Beauty in the Ordinary
Find encouragement in the ordinary beauty of the world around you.
Look for bright spots amidst ugliness, evil, and despair.
insights INSIGHT
Challenge Your Assumptions
We must fight our biases and preconceptions because they are a liability.
Constantly question your assumptions and consider what you haven't considered.
insights INSIGHT
The Dunning-Kruger Effect
The Dunning-Kruger effect describes how ignorance hides the extent of our ignorance.
This effect is prevalent in our politics and cultural life, hindering intellectual humility.
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The Discourses of Epictetus are a series of informal lectures written down by his pupil Arrian around 108 AD. The philosophy of Epictetus is intensely practical, directing students to focus on their opinions, anxieties, passions, and desires to distinguish what is within their control from what is not. The teachings aim to make people free and happy by living virtuously and 'according to nature.' The Discourses cover a wide range of topics, including friendship, illness, fear, and poverty, and how to acquire and maintain tranquility. They are set in Epictetus' classroom in Nicopolis and reflect his earnest and often humorous style of teaching[3][4][5].
The death of expertise
The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters
Thomas M. Nichols
In 'The Death of Expertise,' Tom Nichols examines the forces driving the rejection of expertise in modern American society. He argues that the internet, changes in higher education, and the transformation of the news industry into a 24-hour entertainment machine have contributed to a culture where every opinion is seen as equally valid. Nichols warns that this trend threatens democratic institutions by creating an ill-informed and angry public that denounces intellectual achievement. He emphasizes the importance of a reasoned skepticism and the self-correcting presence of other experts to maintain the integrity of expertise in a functioning democracy.
Ego is the Enemy
Ryan Holiday
In *Ego Is the Enemy*, Ryan Holiday delves into the concept of ego and its detrimental effects on personal and professional success. The book is divided into three sections: Aspiration, Success, and Failure, each offering valuable lessons and perspectives. Holiday draws on a vast array of stories and examples from literature, philosophy, and history, featuring figures such as George Marshall, Jackie Robinson, Katharine Graham, Bill Belichick, and Eleanor Roosevelt. These individuals achieved great success by conquering their own egos, and their strategies and tactics are presented as models for readers. The book emphasizes the importance of staying grounded, continually learning, and embracing a mindset of growth rather than letting ego hinder development.
Meditations
Marcus Aurelius
Meditations is a series of private writings composed by Marcus Aurelius, one of Rome's greatest emperors, as he struggled to understand himself and make sense of the universe. Written between 170 and 180 CE while on military campaigns, this work combines Stoic philosophy with personal observations on leadership, duty, mortality, and human nature. Through twelve books of intimate thoughts never intended for publication, Marcus Aurelius explores themes of self-improvement, resilience in the face of adversity, and living virtuously while accepting what cannot be changed.
Good exists everywhere—we need only look for it. Beauty surrounds us, waiting to be noticed.