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| quote: | I don't feel absolutely secure that I've understood your sentence, but if it's supposed to discuss the essence and existence of God, I'll proclaim that:
If you accept Kant's postulate that we cannot hope to ever know anything about the nature of things in itself - including the "nature" of an possible god/deity, you must recognize that it cannot be known whether his existence determined his essence, visa-versa, or if both are eternal or created at the exact same point of some kind of time/space something.
But that comment is only really relevant if you were talking about God. |
Yes, sorry, I should have made that a bit more clear.
What I was trying to say, was that man exists first and foremost, and by the mere act of existing (with the things he experiences and the choices he makes) he determines his essence this way. I included the phrase "unless you believe in God" because if you believe in God, then the entire thing is different: your essence precedes your existence, because, first and foremost, you had to have been a concept in God's imagination (much like a chair is a concept in the mind of a carpenter) and thus your facticity is fixed and you, to a degree, lose the faculty of choice.
I could go on all day about this, but hopefully that clears it up. 
| quote: | | It sounds awfully tempting - jumping on this bandwagon. But what do people who have no talents, beauty or luck do with this new-found freedom? |
Well that's just it, you can do whatever you like with it. As indicated in the quote I used in the bottom of my last post, you cannot alter your material facticity (your situation) but, as a sentient being, you are still free to transcend any predefined essense (essential facticity I suppose) and become what you wish within the context of your unavoidable situation. If you have no talent, beauty or luck, then you're standing with 99% of humanity who, as a result of their "mediocrity", have to earn what they become, and this concept of "freedom" is the ticket to this "becoming". You are free: what you become is what you've earnt and what you've chosen to be.
(Sorry if I sound like a dogmatic preacher, but I'm in one of those moods )
| quote: | | And what about those 99% of us that will never make a difference, except enriching other people lives temporarily? |
Well, presuming you're familiar with the chaos theory, you'll know that we all make a difference in some way..... 
And even if your only achievement was to enrich the lives of others temporarily, would you care to argue that that isn't a worthwhile accomplishment? If everyone went out of their way to do that - just once a day - this would be a much happier planet to live on, I'm thinking.
| quote: | | Aren't these people/us better off with the belief that somehow there's a predefined meaning with our being here? |
But what if you found out the meaning of life and disagreed with it entirely? Wouldn't you feel cheated?
At least with this system - while there may be nothing "concrete" in this sense to attach your life to - surely the promise of freedom to choose your mode of being is the more attractive option?
| quote: | | What have you done with your own freedom? |
Haha, good point. 
Yes, I can sit here all day spouting this rhetoric to you, but I suppose that the proof is in the pudding with things like this.
As you know from the schooling thread in one of the other forums, I'm not entirely happy with what I'm doing now, so you may argue that my concept of "freedom" has led me nowhere, and as such offers no tangible benefit to its adovocates. Nonetheless, within this existential freedom, I alone am responsible for who I am and I alone am responsible for what I become. I won't pray to God to provide me with happiness, or success, or salvation when all these things are found in much more safe and relaible hands - my own.
My life certainly isn't perfect - and existential freedom offers no guarantees that perfection will ever be attained - but at least I can sleep in the knowledge that I have the potential to change things should I will it. Again, I don't want to sound like some nut-case who believes he has some magic "spiritual-power" that will save all the worlds woes, I'm just saying that it is a realistic outlook, and that, in my opinion, it is the most optimistic of all outlooks.
I don't profess to have all the answers, so please don't assume I've run to some high philosophical ground here. Nonetheless you have the choice to take heed of this logic or to ignore it - neither option being necessarily the right one.
However, whichever option you take, you'll be exercising the exact same freedom that I'm talking about here, whether you're aware of it or not.
Here endeth the lesson. 
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