Bizarro Posted March 4, 2003 #26 Share Posted March 4, 2003 Homer, dont try to draw me into your fruckass it was just a passing comment Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Homer Posted March 4, 2003 #27 Share Posted March 4, 2003 (edited) DS, I'm not trying to draw you anywhere. You made a comment, and I made a correction to your comment. Edited March 4, 2003 by Homer Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loonboy Posted March 4, 2003 #28 Share Posted March 4, 2003 Corrections to comments are cool. (we have way too much time on our hands guys) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SpaceyKC Posted March 4, 2003 #29 Share Posted March 4, 2003 hey that's something we have in common. (I think I'm in good company) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FreyKade Posted March 5, 2003 #30 Share Posted March 5, 2003 homer, what about the fact that yiou keep yourself alive to hel others,......so eating would be both helping yourself and others... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kira Posted March 5, 2003 #31 Share Posted March 5, 2003 Loonboy Posted on Mar 4 2003, 10:19 PM we have way too much time on our hands guys) oh yes this is so true but as KC said hey that's something we have in common. (I think I'm in good company) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Homer Posted March 5, 2003 #32 Share Posted March 5, 2003 homer, what about the fact that yiou keep yourself alive to hel others,......so eating would be both helping yourself and others... skalra63, I had that covered, that is why I said a person staying alive who lives in seclusion, so their life benefits nobody. Nice try, but I can't be defeated in this debate by anyone Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Magikman Posted March 5, 2003 #33 Share Posted March 5, 2003 (edited) Nice try, but I can't be defeated in this debate by anyone Sure you can, however indirectly the benefit may seem, you are helping others if you live in seclusion. You've opened up living space to someone else who may not have otherwise found a dwelling, unless you grow your own food utilizing everything from nature and/or wear fig leaves for clothing, someone benefits from you buying whatever you need to sustain life. It may seem insignificant at first blush, but it grows over a lifetime. The simple act of being born gave purpose to someone's profession, not to mention the relief it brought your mother, which undoubtedly was a benefit. You could even take it further and speculate that your seclusion may have saved the lives of countless people you might have killed in a car accident or gunned down in a fit of uncontrolled rage. Even without trying, there are many benefits to be had just by being alive, there are only degrees of significance that can be argued, albeit not very convincingly. Edited March 5, 2003 by Magikman Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kismit Posted March 5, 2003 #34 Share Posted March 5, 2003 Ahh Magik I knew you would show up Just adding a little to the whole benefiting others = Good Karma debate . My job consists of going out of my way to make peoples days better, brighter and more enjoyable , crappy crap crap crap It dosent do me any good . I must have been really bad in a previos life , to have to smile and say" thank you" and "yes It is chilly out isn't it" to prats with IQ's lower than my shoe size who like to speak slowly so that I understand them . Don't get me wrong I also do completely selfless stuff , I used to help a familly with a severly brain injured daughter but I have had to stop that and take time out for me because I was slowly losing the plot . You can only give so much before you have to start being selfish. I promise when work slows down I will be straight back to helping with my little angel . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loonboy Posted March 5, 2003 #35 Share Posted March 5, 2003 True Kismit. And as they said once in the 'X Files' - motives are seldom unselfish. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Homer Posted March 5, 2003 #36 Share Posted March 5, 2003 Nice try Magik But you fail to grasp the purpose of my posts, and the wording of the statement. I was referring to someone living in complete seclusion, where there is no interaction with another person. Throughout the entire universe, one could argue that anything and everything either directly or indirectly influences everything else, and when you take it to the extreme, that is true. But it seems you haven’t really read the statement: "Nothing really matters in this life unless it is done for the benefit of others". LB and myself have given examples where it is necessary to do things that benefit only yourself, such as staying alive. If a person in total seclusion for the rest of their life dies, how does that either benefit or not benefit someone else? It doesn’t. So my point is there are things that are necessary for survival that benefit an individual only. This is also to the extreme, but it is an accurate example. So no, I can’t be defeated in this debate. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loonboy Posted March 5, 2003 #37 Share Posted March 5, 2003 Oh sod it. I say : The things that matter most in life, are those that are done for the benefit of others... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SpaceyKC Posted March 5, 2003 #38 Share Posted March 5, 2003 Reminds me of a movie, I think it's called 'A Christmas Carol'. I really liked the happy ending. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Homer Posted March 5, 2003 #39 Share Posted March 5, 2003 The things that matter most in life, are those that are done for the benefit of others... Excellent statement LB, and I wholeheartedly agree Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loonboy Posted March 5, 2003 #40 Share Posted March 5, 2003 Y a y y y y y y y ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kismit Posted March 6, 2003 #41 Share Posted March 6, 2003 Awwwww I love a happy ending . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Guest Posted March 23, 2003 #42 Share Posted March 23, 2003 One thing I learnt: Every story has a happy ending...and If doesnt ..then story isnt finished yet... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uranium101 Posted July 6, 2003 #43 Share Posted July 6, 2003 i kind of agree w/ the multidimensional thingie... someday we might be a dog, someday we might be...a grey... hehehehehehe... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djdodo Posted July 6, 2003 #44 Share Posted July 6, 2003 We are not alone. Yeah .. that sounds perfectly true ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FreyKade Posted July 6, 2003 #45 Share Posted July 6, 2003 'we are not alone'.......i agreee with that, even if the others are just in our minds Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MisterBlueSkies Posted August 16, 2003 #46 Share Posted August 16, 2003 What about the idea that another "dimension" branches out as a result of your actions? So if you get hit by a car, somewhere else you don't get hit and win the Olympics? I honestly believe destiny is not really a set course, it's a flexible thing that's really how a particular "you" ends up, like in one of those books were you get to choose the direction the story goes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ghostboo Posted August 25, 2003 #47 Share Posted August 25, 2003 I totally agree with these terms, Buffy. I think there's more to the human psyche than just science. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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