• The roots of discontent arise from chaos. Regardless of how much money/intellect/luck one may possess, “the universe is simply indifferent” and individuals can’t affect the universe. That’s a gravity problem.
  • Maslow's hierarchy of needs apply to most, but once the physiological needs are met, people’s desires begin to creep indefinitely.
  • Culture has shielded people from the threat of chaos. It helps explain phenomenons that are hard to understand. But this leads to cultural hubris, aka a sense of entitlement that they are in control of the universe.
  • Although mankind has collectively improved our material powers over time, we have advanced very little in terms of improving the content of experience.
  • Consciousness is our ability to process the information that engages our nervous system (sight, smell, sound, touch). There’s a limit to how much info it can process.
  • pleasure v enjoyment
    • a challenging activity that requires skills
    • the merging of action and awareness
    • clear goals and feedback
    • concentration of the task at hand
    • the paradox of control
    • the loss of self-consciousness
    • the transformation of time
  • autotellic
  • you can find enjoyment in any activity. it could be difficult, mundane, simple.
  • your body is like a probe made of sensitive devices that contain huge potential to experience flow: sight, sounds, taste…
  • the flow of thought: memory, words, history, science
    • words, names, numbers, concepts, rules for combining them in predictable ways
    • Memory used to be a powerful skill. People memorize poems and stories to share critical learning. Memorization allows for control over consciousness, and is a great flow activity that requires very limited resources. However, the commercialization of writing and printing systems rendered this skill less critical. Today, what skills are valued by society?
    • amateur v professional
    • philosophy means “love of wisdom”
    • lifelong learning