What is Life?

#1
Magical Realist Offline
Found this on FB. Any of these resonate with you? Any others you might add? I like Kafka's view. It somehow suits me at this present time in my life.

What is life?

Dostoevsky: It's hell.
To Dostoevsky, life was a battle with the darkest parts of the human soul—a crucible of suffering where we confront our deepest fears and desires.

Socrates: It's a test.
Life is the ultimate examination of virtue, wisdom, and truth. For Socrates, an unexamined life is not worth living.

Aristotle: It's the mind.
Life is the pursuit of knowledge and reason—a journey to understand the world through logic, ethics, and metaphysics.

Nietzsche: It's power.
Life is the will to power—a striving for self-overcoming and mastery of circumstances, rejecting complacency and embracing growth.

Freud: It's death.
Freud saw life as a tension between the life instinct (Eros) and the death instinct (Thanatos)—a constant drive toward creation and destruction.

Marx: It's the idea.
For Marx, life is shaped by material conditions and the ideologies that arise from them—a struggle to create a world of equality and justice.

Picasso: It's art.
Life is creation—a canvas for painting our passions, emotions, and dreams, shaped by imagination and expression.

Gandhi: It's love.
Gandhi believed life is rooted in nonviolence, compassion, and universal love—a journey toward peace and selfless service.

Schopenhauer: It's suffering.
For Schopenhauer, life is ceaseless striving that inevitably leads to pain and dissatisfaction, tempered only by moments of beauty and art.

Bertrand Russell: It's competition.
Life is shaped by human desires and ambitions—a balancing act between self-interest and collective progress.

Steve Jobs: It's faith.
Life is trusting the process—taking risks and following intuition, even when the road ahead is unclear.

Einstein: It's knowledge.
Einstein saw life as a quest to understand the universe's mysteries, driven by curiosity and awe.

Stephen Hawking: It's hope.
Life is perseverance in the face of adversity—a belief in the future and the power of human ingenuity.

Kafka: It's just the beginning.
Life is surreal and enigmatic, often absurd, yet always opening doors to transformation and possibility.

Camus: It's rebellion.
Life is finding meaning in a meaningless universe, defying absurdity with courage and passion.

Thoreau: It's simplicity.
Life is stripping away the unnecessary—embracing nature and living deliberately.

Rumi: It's a dance.
Life is a spiritual journey—a rhythm of love and divine connection woven into every moment.

Kierkegaard: It's a leap of faith.
Life requires embracing uncertainty and taking bold steps grounded in belief and authenticity.

Epicurus: It's pleasure.
Life is about maximizing simple, lasting pleasures while minimizing unnecessary pain.

Lao Tzu: It's harmony.
Life flows like water—effortless and aligned with the natural order of the universe.

Confucius: It's virtue.
Life is fulfilling roles with integrity, respect, and commitment to community and family.

Carl Jung: It's individuation.
Life is integrating the conscious and unconscious—becoming whole and authentic.

Alan Watts: It's a game.
Life is to be experienced and played with wonder—not taken too seriously.

Victor Frankl: It's meaning.
Life is finding purpose, even in the most difficult circumstances, through love and service.

Simone de Beauvoir: It's freedom.
Life is the power to define yourself and reject roles imposed by society.

Heraclitus: It's change.
Life is constant flux—a river we step into once before it flows anew.

Hegel: It's progress.
Life is a dialectical process, advancing through contradiction and resolution toward greater understanding.

Hobbes: It's survival.
Life in its natural state is "nasty, brutish, and short," requiring systems to maintain order.

Rousseau: It's freedom in nature.
Life is most authentic when we return to our natural state, free from societal corruption.

Marcus Aurelius: It's acceptance.
Life is embracing the present moment with stoic resolve, guided by reason and virtue.

Seneca: It's preparation for death.
Life is not about its length but its quality—teaching us to live well and let go gracefully.

Which of these views on life resonates most with you, and why?
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#2
Zinjanthropos Offline
Quote: What is life?

That’s a good f***ing question.

You talking about the origin, the biology or time spent being alive?
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#4
Ostronomos Offline
Aristotle most vehemently resonates with my philosophy on life.
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#5
Ostronomos Offline
I am absolutely thrilled about the concise summarization of each and every one of those philosophies.
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#6
C C Offline
(Jan 24, 2025 07:47 PM)Magical Realist Wrote: [...] Which of these views on life resonates most with you, and why?

Schopenhauer, Bertrand Russell, Heraclitus, and Hobbes. Many of the quotes seem to be assuming an intelligent organism rather than life in general. And even "suffering" doesn't much apply to brainless organisms. (Dostoevsky's "hell" is too anthropomorphic and moral contextual).

If the topic pertains purely to human life and community, then probably most wishful idealizations and artful reveries can plug into the pragmatic slot for socially constructive thought orientations and prescribed fictions. The four reflect more the basics of "how it is" beneath the artificial stratum of positive and useful [potential] fantasy.
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