On Tue, May 9, 2017 at 11:45 AM, Lyberta lyberta@lyberta.net wrote:
doark@mail.com:
Another thing that bugs me is, since I don't believe in anything, I also don't believe in science. I can't predict what's gonna happen in the next moment. Every once in a while I get in this state of mind where I understand that I understand nothing.
Nobody "believes" in science. The entire point of logically describing and explaining the world via the means of science is to get as close to "the truth" as you can. Accepting the results of scientists is unlike religion not a matter of absolute truth. It is a matter of realizing that for every given time the scientific answer accepted by the community is the closest one to "the truth" that we have. Understanding this is key to having a stable worldview while still being open-minded. The entire point of science is to constantly question the validity of your theories.
In any and all cases I think you might enjoy a book that is eyeopening,
insightful and uplifting, with respect to the world around you, as opposed to your more dreary, despairing, world view.
I was forced to read books at school and this gave a huge hatred for them. I remember I've tried to read a fiction book at psychiatric hospital and after the 1st paragraph I was so enraged that I quickly put it away. Though this mostly applies to fiction.
Not liking reading books means locking yourself out of all information on the world. Since you seem like a smart person not having something to occupy your brain with will make you suffer. So honestly you should get over it for your own shake. _______________________________________________ arm-netbook mailing list arm-netbook@lists.phcomp.co.uk http://lists.phcomp.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/arm-netbook Send large attachments to arm-netbook@files.phcomp.co.uk