P
Psychotheosophy
Guest
Your answer is:Interesting. I do agree that man by his nature will seek for that which he lacks. It is enigma about humanity that the drives that lead us to nobility are at the root the same ones that can lead us to depravity. I have never considered this idea in a context focused on happiness before.
I find the statement that “unhappiness would be an indefinite evil” interesting. Are you speaking of happiness in terms of a sense of completeness, belonging, and true self identification? Or are you seeing something more, or different?
Happiness is what it is, complete happiness.
anything less is something else.
Completion can not be something more than it is.
God is happiness, unity, and existence,
but because of his unity,
happiness is existence,
Just as God is
the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit.
“Belonging” is a means to happiness, and therefore,
not happiness itself.
If a means to happiness is our happiness,
we will not find happiness,
and I don’t think this is an enigma.
Your definition of happiness is a logical contradiction.
and my definition is different.
Now,
I’m not sure how you’re defining, “true self-identification.”
Please explain.
Are you assuming,
that happiness is
“a sense of completeness, belonging, and true self-identification,”
for all people?
Do you believe that asking an infinite series of questions
is the answer to happiness?
Do you believe the process of becoming happier
is our happiness?
This sound like Jungian Psychology.
Are you familiar with Jungian Psychology?
Have a happy vacation ateista!