Wizard22 wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2025 12:34 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2025 12:00 pmand that occurrence is itself determined by external influences.
What?! How is hope "determined by external influences"??? Explain yourself, BigMike!
BigMike wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2025 12:00 pmHope, tempered by common sense as you wisely point out, isn’t some mystical force; it’s a practical tool, a lever within the machinery of cause and effect. The future might be unformed chaos in one sense, but it’s a chaos shaped by countless interconnected factors. And when we understand our place in that system, we can inject the hope that drives action, creating a ripple that pushes the world toward better outcomes.
Hope is not a "tool".
Wizard22, pay attention, because this isn’t complicated unless you make it so. Hope, like any thought or feeling, doesn’t emerge from some magical, untouchable realm of “free” emotions. It’s triggered, shaped, and sustained by external influences—circumstances, interactions, information, or events that occur around you and within you. When you’re exposed to uplifting news, inspiring examples, or even just the prospect of a better outcome, the conditions for hope are set in motion. That’s cause and effect in action.
If you’re arguing that hope is some self-contained phenomenon, independent of external inputs, then you’re ignoring how human psychology works. People don’t just conjure hope out of nowhere. It arises because something—a conversation, an observation, a story—planted the seed. Even internal reflection, which you might argue is “self-generated,” is guided by external stimuli you’ve encountered in the past.
And as for hope being a "tool," your dismissal doesn’t negate the point. A tool is simply something used to achieve an outcome, and hope fits that description perfectly. It’s an emotional lever that can drive action, push people to keep going, or inspire them to take meaningful steps toward change. Call it a tool, a mechanism, or an effect—it doesn’t matter. What matters is that hope doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s part of the deterministic web, influenced and influencing in turn.
If you still can’t see how hope is determined by external influences, take a step back and think about the times you’ve felt hope yourself. What sparked it? A completely uncaused moment, floating in isolation? Or something—a person, a moment, an idea—that shifted your perspective? The answer should be obvious if you’re willing to pay attention.