Thank you, Isabella. I commented on the wrong video, sorry, couldn't locate an email address to write at length. What I would like the younger generations to know (those of us born after 2000) is that this is said to be the information age, because there is quite a lot of information available (much more so than my age, graduating highschool in 1988). Always remember that. Seek and please find guidance how to live in the information age, please, and be healthy and happy. I think the subject of human motivation is more aptly informative than psychology. Sorry to psychology, but not being able to prove psychics to be false is a problem for science. I think depression has fast become a natural state of development, with no intent to disparage it so, after surviving birth and entering puberty. I used to be very depressed, and traded it for anger, which made somewhat of a daredevil of me that could amount to many stories, but the purpose of depression, I think, if there needs to be any, is to discover rationality, not sexuality. Biologically speaking, that's irony, not science, and that's a problem for scientific expression as well as science, itself. We find rationality in philosophy, not the "moral sciences" (or what are now considered 'social sciences" ever since 1850, yes, it;s also that young, too). Rationality rules language. Not knowing your past or your future, I want to say these things because I think you;re plainly just a very cool person. Thank you!
As far as TH-cam goes, I like it, because it's more efficient than the alternative (having no WWW). But TH-cam is a private corporation, and this befuddles no one more than Americans, I think (like myself). The information Age has been developed immensely by Alphabet, or Google (which owns TH-cam). This corporate computer science context for historical science is is amazingly new (about twenty years younger than me). Information is, itself, better than none, but false information can be difficult to detect without logical examination, presumed too easy to educate for some reason, I don't understand that. In any case, our information age deserves excellence in communication, and many of us strive for that, which reminds me how cool it is to be a very cool person. (: It's not only about opportunities, but rather a desire to achieve rational satisfaction in life shared with others. Having learned to identify it, express that, and pursue it further, there could always be more qualities to add to that. I have to learn when to stop responding, say goodbye or good night, and move on to another day. Is it independent mindedness, as the enlightenment philosophers believed, that allows continuity with separate minds? Yes, I think that is it. Keeping friends, too, yes, of course, is why there are cool people, too. Okay? After such a quiet youth as mine, learning to express myself with great clarity, can I please just take a break from supplying more feedback? (: Thank you!
Not related about the depression, I just wamt to say that I like your videos and the way you tell a story. It's gentle and warm.
Thank you that's very kind of you to say!
Thank you, Isabella. I commented on the wrong video, sorry, couldn't locate an email address to write at length. What I would like the younger generations to know (those of us born after 2000) is that this is said to be the information age, because there is quite a lot of information available (much more so than my age, graduating highschool in 1988). Always remember that. Seek and please find guidance how to live in the information age, please, and be healthy and happy.
I think the subject of human motivation is more aptly informative than psychology. Sorry to psychology, but not being able to prove psychics to be false is a problem for science.
I think depression has fast become a natural state of development, with no intent to disparage it so, after surviving birth and entering puberty. I used to be very depressed, and traded it for anger, which made somewhat of a daredevil of me that could amount to many stories, but the purpose of depression, I think, if there needs to be any, is to discover rationality, not sexuality. Biologically speaking, that's irony, not science, and that's a problem for scientific expression as well as science, itself. We find rationality in philosophy, not the "moral sciences" (or what are now considered 'social sciences" ever since 1850, yes, it;s also that young, too).
Rationality rules language. Not knowing your past or your future, I want to say these things because I think you;re plainly just a very cool person. Thank you!
As far as TH-cam goes, I like it, because it's more efficient than the alternative (having no WWW). But TH-cam is a private corporation, and this befuddles no one more than Americans, I think (like myself). The information Age has been developed immensely by Alphabet, or Google (which owns TH-cam). This corporate computer science context for historical science is is amazingly new (about twenty years younger than me). Information is, itself, better than none, but false information can be difficult to detect without logical examination, presumed too easy to educate for some reason, I don't understand that. In any case, our information age deserves excellence in communication, and many of us strive for that, which reminds me how cool it is to be a very cool person. (:
It's not only about opportunities, but rather a desire to achieve rational satisfaction in life shared with others. Having learned to identify it, express that, and pursue it further, there could always be more qualities to add to that. I have to learn when to stop responding, say goodbye or good night, and move on to another day. Is it independent mindedness, as the enlightenment philosophers believed, that allows continuity with separate minds? Yes, I think that is it. Keeping friends, too, yes, of course, is why there are cool people, too.
Okay? After such a quiet youth as mine, learning to express myself with great clarity, can I please just take a break from supplying more feedback? (:
Thank you!