Giant cheesecake fallacy. If future could do everything you wanted to do, it doesn’t mean it would do so. Especially if it will be bad for you. If future decides to let you work on a problem, even though it could solve it without you, you can’t apply to the uselessness of your action: if future refuses to perform it, only you can make a difference. You can grow to be able to vastly expand the number of things you will be capable of doing, this source never dwindles. If someone or something else solved a problem, it doesn’t necessarily spoil the fun for everyone else for all eternity. Or it was worth spoiling the fun, lifting poverty and disease, robbing you of the possibility of working on those things yourself. Take joy in your personal discoveries. Inequality can only be bad because you are not all you could be, not because there are things greater than you. Seek personal growth, not universal misery. Besides, doing something “inherently worthwhile” is only one facet of life, so even if there wouldn’t be a solution to that, there are other wonders worth living for.
Giant cheesecake fallacy. If future could do everything you wanted to do, it doesn’t mean it would do so. Especially if it will be bad for you. If future decides to let you work on a problem, even though it could solve it without you, you can’t apply to the uselessness of your action: if future refuses to perform it, only you can make a difference. You can grow to be able to vastly expand the number of things you will be capable of doing, this source never dwindles. If someone or something else solved a problem, it doesn’t necessarily spoil the fun for everyone else for all eternity. Or it was worth spoiling the fun, lifting poverty and disease, robbing you of the possibility of working on those things yourself. Take joy in your personal discoveries. Inequality can only be bad because you are not all you could be, not because there are things greater than you. Seek personal growth, not universal misery. Besides, doing something “inherently worthwhile” is only one facet of life, so even if there wouldn’t be a solution to that, there are other wonders worth living for.