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coberst
3rd November 2007, 12:20
Creating purpose and intensity in life

I visited a cemetery once and remember this sentiment She Lived Life with Intensity engraved on a head stone. It has an appeal to most citizens but I suspect there would be many different interpretations for its meaning.

What does it mean to live life with intensity? I suspect most would judge that money is the key to such a life. I think that money is the key to comfort, which is not a key that would fit the lock on a life lived with intensity. I suspect that wealth is often the death of life lived with intensity.

I will have to recognize at least one exception to this and that is George Soros. George Soros is both rags to riches--fantastic riches in a domain of finance that he alone began--and an individual with a highly developed intellectual life. I read a book about him and also one by him and I find him a model of one who has lived life with intensity.

I think that developing an intellectual life through a self-actualizing self-learning process is the means to a life lived with intensity. I am convinced that Soros philosopher/tycoon followed that process.

What does this cryptic message She Lived Life with Intensity mean to you?

A dilettante just dabbles at this and that never doing anything with intensity. Intensity is living life with some degree of disinterested passion. Disinterested passion is gusto with small regard to self aggrandizement. A person who has developed their own intellectual sophistication lives a life of passion and depth that few others can even recognize. Carl Sagan said Understanding is a kind of ecstasy. Carl knew what living with intensity is all about. It is about billions and billions while others live with thousands and thousands.

This quotation of Carl Rogers might illuminate my meaning of disinterested knowledge.

I want to talk about learning. But not the lifeless, sterile, futile, quickly forgotten stuff that is crammed in to the mind of the poor helpless individual tied into his seat by ironclad bonds of conformity! I am talking about LEARNING - the insatiable curiosity that drives the adolescent boy to absorb everything he can see or hear or read about gasoline engines in order to improve the efficiency and speed of his 'cruiser'. I am talking about the student who says, "I am discovering, drawing in from the outside, and making that which is drawn in a real part of me." I am talking about any learning in which the experience of the learner progresses along this line: "No, no, that's not what I want"; "Wait! This is closer to what I am interested in, what I need"; "Ah, here it is! Now I'm grasping and comprehending what I need and what I want to know!"

gilhyle
3rd November 2007, 12:57
There are certainly people who appear like that, of whom it can be said they lived life with intensity. I could name Pablo Picasso as an obvious famous example. But I can also name people I know, that you do not know. And there is the problem. If the course of a persons life does not 'justify' their intensity with an exceptional outcome, it easily appears as madness or eccentricity and it certainly appears as living one's life with with limited regard to others.

The admiration for lives so filled is a different thing. It comes from a fear of death and a wish to escape the burden of others. Those who live their lives with such intensity are one thing, their characters are their fate and one should take or leave them as one finds them, depending on one's own life and values. But those who admire such people are a different thing, less acceptable, more lost. This is the difference between Dostoievsky and his character wh ocommits the perfect crime (what was his name, Raskolnikov ?) To live out a life of burning intensity is one thing, it must be done if that is how one feels, to admire such lives as exceptional is dangerous.

What such admiration fails to see is that like all character such persons are the plaything of fate. Their lives may turn out well or badly. There is no priviledged access to success in life deriving from such characters and, most importantly, no validating set of values that makes such people better than others because they are more authentic. Herein lies the route taken by Heidegger; this is the attitude to life of Parvus, by contrast with Trotsky.

(I dont comment on the power of understanding as it is only contingently related to your first point.)

RickyV
4th November 2007, 01:44
The only thing I've ever found in life that creates 'intensity and purpose' is love.

Organic Revolution
4th November 2007, 03:10
what living 'intensely' means to mean is to live in the spirit of the moment and to fulfill your wildest dreams. I look at my own life, traveling across the country on freight trains, going to organize workers and students, falling in love on the plains of Montana, running from cops, and so many other amazing things. Experiencing everything you fear and you love, learning everything possible, being the most well rounded person is living with a purpose means to me.

RickyV
4th November 2007, 03:44
Originally posted by Organic [email protected] 04, 2007 03:10 am
what living 'intensely' means to mean is to live in the spirit of the moment and to fulfill your wildest dreams. I look at my own life, traveling across the country on freight trains, going to organize workers and students, falling in love on the plains of Montana, running from cops, and so many other amazing things. Experiencing everything you fear and you love, learning everything possible, being the most well rounded person is living with a purpose means to me.
Well said, exactly how I feel.