On Philosophy

On Philosophy

A Story by CamiloAtCJahVoid
"

Some thoughts

"
Every once in a while I use the Latin quote of Laissez Faire "Stabilisque Minimeque Invidiosus Que Ocupati Sunt" "That who preoccupies himself with his own pursuits, with least evil intent, is most just". Even though historically it wasn't written for me because I would have been considered having savage blood, the quote can be quite helpful and definitely Buddhist influenced. It's just hard when the world reminds me of the fact its not for everyone in our reality and only a select few.
This isn't the first point in history this happens either, I apply the concept of "Eudamonia" or the pursuit of happiness from Socratic Greek philosophy. Even though, again, I remember celebrating Ceder with my jewish family and the pursuit of happiness was reserved for non servants, a celebration escaping servitude wasn't the right idea of eudamonia. And again, I get turned off when I'm reminded that the joys of freedom to pursue the happiness is reserved for some not for all.
There is a few books that strike a feeling of wellbeing and sheer beauty, the resurrection of Christ in the New Testamentand the 100 words for God as all loving, all merciful written in the Quran. Shall you not accept the love, and mercy; you have more hurt left in your soul. The ten commandments and seven deadly sins are to receive protection from pain and suffering as is the four noble truths to protect you from karmic pain and suffering. Shall you avoid this, you are avoiding God and will be cast down, or in modern sense; become a sociopath, narcissist, psychopath incapable of connecting to the human experience.
Now I come to a crossroads, there is one more modern philosophy that I don't ascertain or entertain. This is called the triumph of will. The idea that if you're fed up with trying, eliminate what stands in your way even when it's people including women and children.
The question I want to ask is, regardless of background, what message do you want to leave here on earth and by what means? Zionism as antisemitism may be up for debate, but genocide is not. Genocide is antisemitism, and for solidarity sake, so is criminalizing immigration.

© 2026 CamiloAtCJahVoid


My Review

Would you like to review this Story?
Login | Register




Share This
Email
Facebook
Twitter
Request Read Request
Add to Library My Library
Subscribe Subscribe


Stats

19 Views
Added on January 11, 2026
Last Updated on January 11, 2026