Thanks, Leadville. Hope the dawgwalk was a good one. My dawg had her annual "wellness" exam yesterday and her vet was thrilled -- she'd lost 3 pounds. When we rescued Ellie after she'd been in a high-kill shelter, she was skinny, and once in her fur-ever home, she was happily packing on the pounds. Glad she's settled back in a good healthy balance. Walking no doubt helps both of us.
Since this week has been slow here after an active one (mama said there'd be weeks like this), I have some philosophical questions to pose to our Coursers. Ruminate on these and give me a 1000-word essay by next week. : ) (I cribbed these from the Internet...will give the site in another post -- dare not edit 'cause you know instant vaporization)
Here they are:
What harsh truths do you prefer to ignore?
Is free will real or just an illusion?
Is there a meaning to life? If so, what is it?
Is the meaning of life the same for animals and humans?
Where is the line between art and not art?
Does fate exist? If so, do we have free will?
What does it mean to live a good life?
Why do we dream?
Is it possible to live a normal life and not ever tell a lie?
Does a person’s name influence the person they become?
What should be the goal of humanity?
If you could become immortal on the condition you would NEVER be able to die or kill yourself, would you choose immortality?
How will humans as a species go extinct?
What actions in your life will have the longest reaching consequences? How long will those effects be felt?
If a child somehow survived and grew up in the wilderness without any human contact, how “human” would they be without the influence of society and culture?
Where does your self-worth come from?
How would humanity change if all humans’ life expectancy was significantly increased (let’s say to around 500 years)?
Where do you find meaning in your life?
What do you think would be humanity’s reaction to the discovery of extraterrestrial life?
Will religion ever become obsolete?
If you could teach everyone in the world one concept, what concept would have the biggest positive impact on humanity?
Is suffering a necessary part of the human condition? What would people who never suffered be like?
Does hardship make a person stronger? If so, under what conditions and at what point is it too much hardship? If not, what makes a person stronger?
Would things get better or worse if humans focused on what was going well rather than what’s going wrong?
Bonus points:
Mac or PC?
Coke or Pepsi?
Baseball bonus:
Best rivalry:
Cubs versus Cardinals?
Yankees versus Red Sox?
Soccer or "football" across the pond: Would it be more exciting were the goal wider and scores like 10-9 more common than 1-0?
Carry on, Coursers....cheerio....