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How UNreasonable Can You Be?

February 10, 2014 by Joycelyn Campbell 5 Comments

People of Accomplishment
(Photo credit: Celestine Chua)

There is general, though not absolute, agreement that being reasonable is good and being unreasonable is bad. Depending on how you define the terms, however, you can find more than one way to parse the differences between them.

I tried being reasonable; I didn’t like it. –Clint Eastwood

Some of the most awake and alive experiences of my life have occurred while I was trying to do things that were so outrageously unreasonable they seemed impossible to accomplish. Apparently, I like challenges. But that may just be part of my temperament. I was never particularly reasonable, even as a child—some might say especially as a child.

Some synonyms for reasonable are: sensible, logical, rational, moderate, mild, well-balanced, agreeable, and fair.

Some synonyms for unreasonable are: excessive, immoderate, illogical, irrational, extravagant, extreme, wild, and unrestrained.

A reasonable person is considered to be prudent and cautious, someone who avoids extremes. But reasonable can also mean mediocre, ordinary, average, and tolerable. And unreasonable can mean bold, daring, audacious, exceptional, and unexpected. An unreasonable person may keep going even after reaching reasonable limits. An unreasonable person may have unreasonable expectations—of herself and of others.

The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man. [Or woman!] –George Bernard Shaw

Reasonable people tend to take fewer risks than unreasonable people take. Reasonable is often the safer course—but not always. Nor is it always the best course.

Dream no small dreams for they have no power to move the hearts of men. –Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Creativity and reasonableness often don’t mesh, since being reasonable requires a degree of cognitive inhibition, while some stages of creativity require cognitive disinhibition.

Certainly you aren’t likely to be faulted for being reasonable and for refusing to accept unreasonable demands, requests, or challenges.

But remember that when you aim for reasonable, then reasonable is probably the best you can hope to achieve.

Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life? –Mary Oliver

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Filed Under: Beliefs, Choice, Consciousness, Creating, Living, Meaning, Mind Tagged With: Accomplishment, Achievement, Clint Eastwood, George Bernard Shaw, Living, Mary Oliver, Meaning, Reasonableness, Unreasonableness

Constraints

January 2, 2014 by Joycelyn Campbell Leave a Comment

Split rail fencing Yosemite Valley alongside o...
(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Constraints give your life shape. Remove them and most people have no idea what to do: look at what happens to those who win lotteries or inherit money. Much as everyone thinks they want financial security, the happiest people are not those who have it, but those who like what they do. –Paul Graham, programmer, writer, investor

Filed Under: Creating, Finding What You Want, Happiness, Living Tagged With: Constraints, Happiness, Living, Money, Paul Graham, Working

Happiness

November 24, 2013 by Joycelyn Campbell 2 Comments

Happiness
(Photo credit: Rickydavid)

The human animal, like others, is adapted to a certain amount of struggle for life, and when by means of great wealth homo sapiens can gratify all his whims without effort, the mere absence of effort from his life removes an essential ingredient of happiness. The man who acquires easily things for which he feels only a very moderate desire concludes that the attainment of desire does not bring happiness. If he is of a philosophic disposition, he concludes that human life is essentially wretched, since the man who has all he wants is still unhappy. He forgets that to be without some of the things you want is an indispensable part of happiness. —Bertrand Russell, The Conquest of Happiness

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Filed Under: Finding What You Want, Happiness, Living, Meaning Tagged With: Bertrand Russell, Happiness, Living, Meaning

Discovery

September 29, 2013 by Joycelyn Campbell 4 Comments

Surprised?
(Photo credit: SaZeOd)

Discovery isn’t really finding something you’re expecting.

It’s finding something that you couldn’t possibly dream of.

But realizing that it’s important.

That’s really the heart of discovery.

The big things are the unexpected.

–Paleontologist Paul Sereno

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Filed Under: Creating, Finding What You Want, Living, Purpose Tagged With: discovery, Living, Meaning, Paul Sereno

It’s a Mystery

September 13, 2013 by Joycelyn Campbell 3 Comments

EPIC FU Conspiracies: 12/9
(Photo credit: Steve Woolf)

hidden agenda
n
a secret or ulterior motive for something

Imagine what it would be like if everyone, everywhere on the planet, had a hidden agenda. Imagine these agendas are so well hidden, even the people who have them don’t know what they are.

Imagine further that everyone has multiple hidden agendas they don’t know about: your family members, the store clerks you encounter, your friends and neighbors, the people you work with, the other drivers on the road, your representatives in congress, all the way up to heads of state.

To make things even stranger, imagine that there’s no way to find out directly what those hidden agendas are.

What would that sci-fi world look like?

Actually, it would look exactly like the world we live in. Odd though it may sound, this isn’t fiction; it’s reality. And it isn’t the result of any kind of conspiracy. It’s just the way our brains work. The truth is that we have no idea what we’re up to most of the time. And neither do the people “at the top,” who are in significant positions of power.

As a species, we’ve managed to get this far without being aware of or acknowledging our hidden agendas. I can’t help but wonder how much better we could be—and how much farther we could go—if we did become aware of and acknowledge them.Enhanced by Zemanta

Filed Under: Brain, Consciousness, Living, Mind Tagged With: Brain, Hidden Agenda, Living, Mind, Neuroscience

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