Monday, May 30, 2011

How does imagination lend meaning to our lives and experiences

The imagination is a one of our most valuable skills. The imagination can act as a defense mechanism when we need it the most. It can do anything, from keeping us sane in times when we are faced with something traumatizing to entertaining us when we are bored. It can be the key to happiness or lead to our demise. In Twilight zone episodes “Walking distance” and “lonely” we can see examples of how powerful the imagination can be. Us, humans, are one of the few beings in the planet that can experience incidents in our head before and after they happen. We can re-live our experiences or have ‘what if?’ experiences through our imagination; we use the imagination to do this almost as if watching a film.

In Twilight zone episode “Walking distance” we are introduced to Martin Slone. Martin believes he has travelled in time into a period of his life that he appreciates dearly. It is not until the end that we realize why he is there. Martins father tells him that he should stop seeking the happiness he had at his youth and look for happiness somewhere else or he will remain depressed. This final conversation he has with his dad leads me to believe that the entire time travelling experience was Martin’s subconscious using his imagination to move on. Sometimes there are things we know deep down inside and Martin uses his imagination to experience what advice his dad would give him. This episode made me realise that taking a trip down memory lane can be nice but dwelling in you past and not doing anything for your future will get you nowhere.

In “The lonely” we me a man named Corry who is sentenced to be alone for 50 years on an asteroid for a crime he did not commit. Capt. Allenby and his crew are in charge of supplying Corry with food four times a year and are then only people Corry ever gets to see. What Corry wants more then anything else is some companionship and that’s just what Allenby provides for him. Corry is left with a human-like robot that was built to be a woman. She has all the attributes of a human and can even cry. Corry wants the loneliness to go away bad that he lets his imagination take over and comes to see the robot as a real woman and falls in love. Capt. Allenby returns with the news that Corry’s case has been reviewed and he was found to be innocent. Corry is exited to go back home with the love of his life but his dreams are shattered when the Capt. tells him that the ship can only carry fifteen pounds of stuff besides him. Corry only needed to imagine the robot was real while he on the asteroid. The Capt. frees Corry from his self induced delusion by shooting the robot in the face and showing him the reality. Corry’s imagination helps him survive the final months he was on the asteroid; I’ve come to this conclusion because he tells the Capt. that the robot is the reason he has kept sane.

These too episodes put us in seemingly impossible situations but we can see real cases where the imagination has helped people in similar ways. My grandmother used to tell me about all her problems when i was a baby. This might seem absurd since babies can’t understand but she imagined that i could and letting out her problems made her feel better. In life one must always seek happiness and this is made possible by the imagination even when we are put in situations that can make happiness hard to come by.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Research Papers

Throughout the year i have come to the conclusion that the most annoying thing in the world is citing a paper. I understand its important because people might wanna check your sources. If it were not for citing people would just claim anything to be true without displaying proof. In this writing intensive cluster I've learned that the internet is a good source but nothing is as good a source as an actual book. Plus you feel a little smarter and 'college-ish'. I’ve learned that if you cannot remember what your thesis is by the end of your paper its not a good sign……at all. I Gained some awesome researching skills. For example: I never knew how to research articles and now I can find one about practically anything. Some of my friends would tell me that doing research papers that had to do with what they were majoring in were boring; I have yet to encountered a moment of boredom while doing these papers and i believe it is because i am doing what i love. Having to do all these research papers has made me realize that I'm going in the right direction with what i want to study. Philosophy is my passion and i am confident about where it will take me. :D

Monday, May 9, 2011

The Übermensch

     The Übermensch is a concept in the philosophy of Friedrich Neitzsch and was first introduced in Nietzsche's book Thus spoke zarathustra. Übermensch meaning Superman or out of the proportion of humanity is introduced by Neitzche in contrast to Christianity but it applies to all religions. Neitzsche introduces the Übermensch with the intention to admonish (to counsel another against something to be avoided) his audience to ignore those who promise otherworldly hopes because it will draw them away from the real world. By this i believe he means that you should not live your life with the goal of having an awesome after-life because things like this are uncertain. Wouldn't you be pissed to find out that you lived your life by a set of rules that had no effect in where you end up after you die?

     Neitzsche believes that these other worlds originate from a dissatisfaction with life which leads one to create these other worlds where your actions in this one will be either rewarded or punished (a.k.a heaven and hell). The Übermensch is one who is not interested or motivated by worlds away from this one. Neitzsche also brings the concept of  "The death of God" to go hand in hand with the Übermensch for when the people follow the path of the Übermensch the idea of God no longer will provide us with values thus God is dead. Neitzsche wants us to set our own values without the help of religion and i know we can all agree that the world would be a better place if we took all the values of religion and ignore all the things in them that breed hate and prejudice. As harsh as it may seem to some, i agree with Neitzsche. Think of it as Morpheus freeing you from the matrix.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

A beautiful mind :D

     A beautiful mind is a movie about a schizophrenic genius John Nash and how he struggles to live a normal life with his condition. At first his delusions help him out; like his best friend who pushes him to continue the work which ultimately lead to him winning the nobel prize. His delusions start getting out of hand when William, one of his imaginary acquaintances, and he becomes increasingly paranoid. What i love about this movie is that it answers a question i always wondered about. Can schizophrenics live normal lives without medication? I find that telling somebody something isn't real is really interesting because one really can never know and i came to that conclusion when i came across Plato's allegory of the cave


     We judge wether something is real or not by using our five sense and comparing our experiences to other's. If the experiences are all similar we take this to be a reality. Now the problem with schizophrenics is that they can experience the things they see with their five sense so who's to say they are crazy. Sadly we can never know and we put these people in hospitals because they experience things that we cannot. The thing that makes John Nash's case so awesome is that he forced himself into ignoring his delusions because of his love for his family. In my opinion, John Nash is perfectly sane because he realized his delusions were not real and delt with them............sounds like the sane thing to do :D