I used to believe that procrastinating is bad as everyone says.
But now I think it is not, being a procrastinator myself. We evolved to do things better, including things like doing homework and other things that we decide to do it tomorrow. So I think evolution made us procrastinators. Here is a kind of characteristics of things we procrastinate: things we don't have to finish right now; things we don't want to do because of it's boring nature or other factors. Even looking at this crappy characterization, we can make out the merits of procrastinating. First, it allows the most urgent matters to be done. Since things we procrastinate are things we don't have to get done right away, it allows our time to be spent on things we have to get it done. Second and much better reason is that procrastinating allows us to get things done more efficiently. If you do an English essay that is due next week, you are much more likely to be unfocused. It is not a very good use of the time. But if you are finishing you essay midnight before the essay is due, you are probably gonna be working your butt off. This is extremely efficient use of the time. Much more so than doing it a week before. Of course there are downfalls of procrastination. You can get too lazy as to not do the things at all. But I think, for the most part, procrastinating gets things done more efficiently and allows us to make good use of our time as well as help us do things we don't want later. Procrastinating is good if you get things done eventually. I guess.
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Let's say that there is no higher being. There is no god or creator. Life came to exist just by a series of chemical reactions and other processes.
If you think that way, then we can discover the meaning of life: there is none. That is what we fear and why we still cling to religions that tell us a different story. They try to convince us that we are special and we are here to be good and to go to heaven. Well, we are designed to fear meaninglessness of life. Evolution made us that way. We are highly evolved beings. So are mammals, amphibians, birds, and even bugs. They all fear or try to avoid death. Because death is a threat to a species. All species that did not care about the survival of the species died out because they did not worry about their own survival. Since humans are one of the most highly evolved organisms, we are highly selected for survival. We are one of the best species at survival. Since feeling that life is meaningless is a threat to survival, we naturally refrain from such beliefs. However, natural selection and other evolutionary processes made us intelligent--intelligent enough to think logically without emotion and gut feelings. This enabled us to discover objective truth about the meaning of life: life is fundamentally meaningless. That life is meaningless is hard to believe, because all of evolutionary processes have been working against that. But the same intelligence that enabled us to survive also enabled us to understand that life is meaningless (for some people) at least. Well, it is sort of an irony. I understand the persistence of religion. I would like to believe that I can enjoy eternal happiness in heaven. But logic of my brain and my belief in reason deny me such pleasure. I think if life is meaningless, then there is no point on living it. Well, that is true. But everything ends eventually. The universe itself will die some day. Even if humans survive even the death of the universe, we cannot survive the infinity of time. We will all die eventually. Well, I don't want to accept that. But that's the truth. The point is that we don't necessarily have to kill ourselves because life is meaningless. I don't understand going suicidal because you just realized you have to die. Why not make a meaning out of the meaningless? If we think that it's meaningful, then it is meaningful to us. But I don't want people losing their choices just because of certain religions. Religion is a method of remedying the blow done by the meaninglessness. But I don't think the meaninglessness is too great. Religion still keeps us relieved but I don't think that should limit ourselves or hamper our happiness. Religion shouldn't be as strong as it is right now. It's time to stop clinging to religions indiscriminately. It's time to make a choice. If we think choice is important, then it is. I acknowledge that writing this, this very act of writing is meaningless. But, well, I'm still a person and I believe happiness of all people is important. So I write this. I found a meaning in this and there exists meaning because I said it is meaningful. I hope you see the world as meaningful. |
Jin Woo WonAn undergrad at Columbia University, studying Computer Science and in particular artificial intelligence. Archives
October 2017
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