Up@dawn 2.0

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Perception of Happiness

Happiness seems to be based on perception. But, happiness is a judgement. We don't judge an experience as being happy or sad until we are already in the throes of emotion. So if happiness can seem to be list of things can we add to that list? For example, think about things like acquired taste at first you dislike the taste of coffee but the caffeine makes you happier in the morning. So how much happiness are you missing just by not having the faculties to properly extract happiness from the situation? So it seems the best way to experience reality is to not let past experience completely dictate outcomes through premature labeling. How many of the labels you give to reality are even your labels? Think about the many ways you define existence are an echo of your education. This is the Socratic notion of not being able to know anything. Once you claim to have all the knowledge about a specific experience you lose the ability to learn anything else about it. So when you put your happiness and unhappiness down to a set list you cut yourself off from a huge amount of experience.I operate under the assumption that reality is infinite. The human brain is an expert at taking experience and mashing it together into symbolic meaning and giving it a label. Your experience of reality is delivered through a lens that is affected by every experience you have.

2 comments:

  1. I agree that most people develop a judgment of things through past experience and then forever label it accordingly. For me i hated celery as a child and decided to try it again when I got older. I still hated it. But would you agree that most people will experience something for the first time and whatever emotion arose out of that experience is directly labeled the same for all other similar situations? I think so. But I think it safe to say that you do know certain situations well enough to know you won't gain happiness from experiencing it. Still I think it is a problem when a person can broaden their view of an unhappy experience by making ridiculous analogies and connections. For example, a person being unhappy about the taste of Hershey chocolate and then goes on to say everything that is chocolate is nasty without ever having tried anything else. They could be missing out on some happy moments by refusing to try.

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  2. "So when you put your happiness and unhappiness down to a set list you cut yourself off from a huge amount of experience." This is true, if you think your list is exhaustive and complete. But what about an open-ended, ever-revisable list? I think it's actually happy-making, to have such a list and continually revise it in the light of new experience AND reflection. This goes for things small - celery, chocolate, sushi, Indian food... - and large - friends, family, time to enjoy them...

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