duszek wrote:Is intellect or experience more important for finding a suitable girlfriend ?
A girlfriend suitable for what? (lol)
For intellectual conversation of course, so that one has someone to talk to on a regular basis and does not get depressed and lonely and takes to drinking and ends up in a gutter.
reasonemotion wrote:What is more important, Intellect or Experience?
IMPORTANT FOR WHAT?
Mr Attofishpi
For anything.
What about for everything? The average of averages...the meaning of mean?
Both should proceed through the path of time with equal value. As one is capable of experience ones intellect should grow permitting further experience and thus furthering intellect.
[Just looking for a suitable existing thread for my post... I’m not disputing anything previously said here.]
How reliable is experience?
Often, people who insist they know ultimate truth will say that their experience has shown/proven it to them -- and somehow they seem able to completely ignore the screaming logic that points to the vast range of everyone ELSE'S experiences.
Experience is captivatingly realistic for all of us, and we use it as a basis for what we think (sometimes for much of our lives) –- yet, logically, wouldn’t experience naturally and continually be evolving if we weren’t using it as pillars to uphold a particular identity/belief?
What if ones experience is simply a garment that they are wearing for this event we call life? It adds interest for the duration of the event. It may continually shift to match the changing climate. It does not reflect an ultimate reality because there isn’t one. Rather, we’re at a party... and we’re intoxicated. We may not know why we were invited, or how we got here... and in the morning we may not remember any of it. Is that a bad thing? Or shall we live in the moment and appreciate our experience for the interest it adds for us INDIVIDUALLY, and accept that we don’t actually know any ultimate truths and don’t need to?
Intellect. Why? Because if I can't learn from my experience, what's the point of experiencing anything? Eg. All of us are experiencing this forum. Only some of us are gleaning something from it. That, of course, is not to say that experience is any lesser, as we'd otherwise not be learning anything, given an experience vacuum. But intellect allows us to make use of it.
This is a gross over-simplification of a very complex pattern of behaviour. Although it seems likely that some individuals are more genetically predisposed to compulsive behaviour than others this a very long way from being the full story of addiction. There are host of other biochemical, environmental and sociological factors which come into play, all of which interact with each other.
This is a gross over-simplification of a very complex pattern of behaviour. Although it seems likely that some individuals are more genetically predisposed to compulsive behaviour than others this a very long way from being the full story of addiction. There are host of other biochemical, environmental and sociological factors which come into play, all of which interact with each other.
reasonemotion wrote:The best philosophy of life comes from experience?
What if a person has extensive experience and learns nothing from it.
Does that mean the intellect is more important because it allows a person the ability to analyze and learn from an experience.
If a person reads extensively, does that make a person intellegent? or
is balance a necessity in all this?
Which sounds better; chalk or cheese?
You gain experience and intellect through your life and both are required and unavoidable. But since they are not the same things; nor even the same type of things, they are unquantifiable for comparison.
Thus your thread is empty.