I am new to the site in the sense that last week I didn’t know the names of anyone who posts here, but I have been putting in the time to try to “catch up” on the issues that current posters and commenters think important.
As the top-scoring post is currently about the limitations of generalizing from one’s own mind, I thought Alicorn was quite savvy to admit she was predicating her post upon lots of gooey self-exposure, and that admission primed me to read the rest of the post must less skeptically.
Even as posters may most often strive to say things that are true beyond the doubt of bias, I found this post very illuminating in its own right, because it is an account of a person fighting and gaining ground in her battle to live fruitfully as a mind which strives to be rational yet is fundamentally not so.
Now, to go get acquainted with the rest of living luminously.
Edit: Pronouns changed!
By the way, I am uncertain as to how to think about the quantification (number / proportion / “ballpark estimate”) of real people who fit the concept of Russel’s “wiser people”, or Yeats’ “best”.
How far off would I be if I were to estimate the quantity of such wiser and better people as “less than one third of the population of any given tribe” ?
Is anyone brave enough to say it should be thought of as a drastically smaller quantity?
Is anyone brave enough to realize how much they themselves actually fit the description for the “fools and fanatics” or “worst”—and then, after realizing it, actually become the better?
Or am I perhaps better off to not pick at the idea?