top | item 29891942

(no title)

ultramegachurch | 4 years ago

I had the same reaction. I’m an endlessly skeptical and often cynical person. Whenever I see someone confidently believe they are “right”, I instinctively trust them less. This article made me realize this is just my own flavor of righteousness.

That’s not to say righteousness is inherently bad. The only reason people make decisions is because they believe they’re right. I enjoyed this article but perhaps it’s overly reductive. I don’t know what we can do to cure righteousness, and maybe that premise itself is nonsensical.

discuss

order

JackFr|4 years ago

My take away is that all we can hope to do is our best, and recognize that we’re all trying to do our best.

No one is the villain of their own narrative.

titanomachy|4 years ago

I think severely depressed people can sometimes be the villain of their own narrative.

phkahler|4 years ago

It's fine for people to want to do good. It's not fine when its driven by subconscious emotional motives.

bluetomcat|4 years ago

"Right" is relative to one's particular situation and social surroundings. One thing could be right for a remote-working individual living in a big city, and it could at the same be wrong for country dwellers. Different types of communities function in different ways.