Society Magazine

POEM: Forced Philosophizing

By Berniegourley @berniegourley

POEM: Forced PhilosophizingLife makes philosophers of us all.

You're forced to decide how you will know your truth.

And it is "your truth," or "my truth."

We are powerless to determine THE truth, having only a limited capacity to even discern it.

"Your truth" is the concoction of fact and fiction by which you dance through life.

Now, you may say,

"Life may force me to be a liar, a whore, and a scoundrel, but I'll never stand for it to make me a philosopher!"

Maybe you think you can side-step philosophy by taking answers straight from science, scripture, or lockstep walking with your tribe, but making that decision has still forced you to philosophize.

No matter what default you choose, knowledge of truth will remain limited and sometimes faulty.

I favor holding truths like an intact bird's egg found fallen out of a nest - careful not to grasp too tightly for fear of either crushing it or having a misidentified velociraptor chick pop out and bite off my thumb.

I can't say that this is a better approach than those who hold truths in the way of a rodeo rider with a dislocated elbow and shoulder who - never-the-less - stayed his eight.

It's not just in matters of truth and knowledge that we are forced to philosophize.

One also has to determine what constitutes a virtuous life, and to what degree one finds chasing said path worth the effort. Again, the choice to outsource future thought to a holy book is still an act of philosophizing.

I understand that most people don't want to be seen as a philosopher anymore than than they would want to be seen as a masochist - a lifestyle which bears something in common with philosophy.

After all, the philosopher is one who insists on engaging in rigorous and tedious thought on subjects that offer no right answers - just a huge slate of equally least-worst options.

If she wanted to engage in such thought AND uncover the right answer, she'd be a scientist.

If he wanted to wax eloquent on his love of living in the dark, he'd study language or literature.

But the philosopher likes his thought like he likes his tragic figures of Greek mythology -Sisyphean.


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