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> <channel><title>Autarchy of the Private Cave &#187; important</title> <atom:link href="https://bogdan.org.ua/tags/important/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>https://bogdan.org.ua</link> <description>Tiny bits of bioinformatics, [web-]programming etc</description> <lastBuildDate>Wed, 28 Dec 2022 16:09:04 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en-US</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>https://wordpress.org/?v=3.8.27</generator> <item><title>What is important in life</title><link>https://bogdan.org.ua/2008/06/19/what-is-important-in-life.html</link> <comments>https://bogdan.org.ua/2008/06/19/what-is-important-in-life.html#comments</comments> <pubDate>Thu, 19 Jun 2008 19:59:18 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator><![CDATA[Bogdan]]></dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Personal]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Society]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Welfare]]></category> <category><![CDATA[important]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Life]]></category> <category><![CDATA[life's purpose]]></category> <category><![CDATA[meaning of life]]></category> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.bogdan.org.ua/?p=88</guid> <description><![CDATA[It has been over 18 months, since I started this post. As a result, it has gone through some (though not really extensive) internal reviews and modifications. I have no doubts there will be more comebacks and reviews and edits to this topic. On Sunday, the 10th of December, 2006, the grandmother of my wife [&#8230;]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>It has been over 18 months, since I started this post. As a result, it has gone through some (though not really extensive) internal reviews and modifications. I have no doubts there will be more comebacks and reviews and edits to this topic.</em></p><p>On Sunday, the 10th of December, 2006, the grandmother of my wife died &#8211; almost three days after she had a cardiac infarction.</p><p>She was a kind, calm, warm-hearted old woman. She was just a little bit over 79 years old.</p><p>What did she leave behind?</p><p>She had brought up and educated her children and grandchildren to be People. None of her offspring went the way of crimes, or even disrespect towards others. The likes of her children could form a quasi-ideal ethical society, with no exaggeration &#8211; given she would be able to teach and bring up all of them.</p><p>She served the society well, working as a psychotherapist at a hospital. She helped people regain peace of mind, she cured mental diseases in the best way she could. She happened to meet her old-time patients in the street from time to time, and they expressed gratitude for her help.</p><p>She left a memory of a good, reliable, helpful person. This memory lives with all the people who were lucky to know her.</p><p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p><p>Death is the final evaluation for the person&#8217;s deeds during life.</p><p>What are the measures for this evaluation? What is really important? What matters <em>after</em> death?</p><p>First, it appeared to me that human memories are what matters. Memories of good deeds, memories of helping others, memories of being valuable for the society and mankind. &#8220;To put the mark on history&#8221; and &#8220;to be placed on record&#8221; are the expressions of the desire to have people remember someone even after death.<br
/> <span
id="more-88"></span><br
/> However, I have doubts that <em>memories</em> are what is really important. (I cannot explain what I mean with <em>really important</em> at the moment &#8211; I&#8217;m risking to get into circular argumentation. So let us consider this property to be something metaphysical, which isn&#8217;t directly related to the majority of phenomena we come to know during our lives, but which is a constituent component of all the deeds and actions.) Take stage, movie and music stars, for example. &#8220;Stars&#8221; often have huge numbers of people remembering them for decades and sometimes even centuries. But these are memories of &#8220;performers&#8221;, of &#8220;personal abilities to play well&#8221;, of &#8220;being able to live a role, not play it&#8221;, to &#8220;bring enjoyment to the lives of others&#8221; <em>etc</em> &#8211; these are <strong>not</strong> important <em>per se</em>. To put it simple, I consider &#8220;fame memories&#8221; generally <strong>not</strong> <em>really important</em>.</p><p>Thinking of <em>fame memories</em>, I can&#8217;t reject the notion of brightest stars and best artists directing the development of culture and pushing &#8220;into the masses&#8221; the understanding and the measure of the beautiful, the aesthetic side of existence. In my opinion, this is especially true of the Renaissance artists &#8211; taking into account the pre-Renaissance notions of <em>culture</em> and <em>beauty</em>, and the drastically different Renaissance art. Note the difference here: it&#8217;s not the <em>artists</em> we remember, but their <em>art</em> and the whole <em>period</em>. Of course, the names of Da Vinchi and Michelangelo cannot be forgotten &#8211; it&#8217;s just that their creations had outgrown the authors. What was done &#8211; was a massive <em>change</em>, and <strong>change is important</strong>. If it were for a single artist, not making the change happen &#8211; yes, we would probably still know his name, but that would only be primarily a part of the history book, not mankind&#8217;s heritage.</p><p>If I do ignore (personal) stage fame, and also drop memories within smaller groups and communities, then <em>memories</em> can be excluded from the list of really important attributes, following one&#8217;s life. Not to mention that &#8220;fame&#8221; also needs lots of manual refinement &#8211; e.g. the case of the &#8220;famous Herostratus&#8221;.</p><p>Let&#8217;s make an intermediary point: <em>fame is not important, change in society is</em>.</p><p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p><p>Let&#8217;s continue the never-ending search for the sense of life.</p><p>Evidently, anything valuable/material/physical you earned and spent during your life doesn&#8217;t matter &#8211; salaries, bonuses, dividends, etc &#8211; that was to support your body during life.</p><p>Any property you had during your life is not a measure as well. Your property might be inherited by your children, if you have them &#8211; but it is not a measure of your deeds. Being a land-owner, an industrialist, or a multi-billionaire is not a thing to write on a grave stone (in my opinion).</p><p>A thing to consider is charity. There is an idea that charity is good. Gifting fully-equipped computer-room to your school will likely bring benefits to the quality of education of the quite a number of pupils of that school. Not all charity is beneficial, though: only that is, which does change (improve) the state of things. However, I do not recollect any act of charity, which would exit the bounds of an enclosed society (be it even the whole country) or the time-frame of two generations. What I mean to say is: charity is the way to convert your financial wealth into the well-being of many others, <strong>if it makes a change</strong>. And <em>the bigger the change, the longer its effect &#8211; the more real importance</em> was created.</p><p>Another intermediary point: changes are really important for the <em>final evaluation</em>. The larger the scale of the changes you make, the longer the effect of those changes &#8211; the more value, the more <em>real importance</em> you create. (Granted, of course, that the changes you make aren&#8217;t against the principles of morality, ethics, and well-being.)</p><p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p><p>What do people consider important to do during their lives?</p><p>I know a number of people who live &#8220;for new impressions&#8221;, who want to &#8220;try everything&#8221; and gain as much as possible of &#8220;new experience&#8221;. However, these impressions and experience are personal &#8211; they die with the person. Thus, they cannot be a measure of one&#8217;s final evaluation, one&#8217;s &#8220;value-added <em>real importance</em>&#8220;.</p><p>A lot of people consider travelling to be a synonym of self-development. They think that travelling is worth the time. Is it so, when it comes to the death still? Evidently, it&#8217;s not &#8211; travelling is just one of the types of gaining personal impressions, personal experience. It (mostly) serves the selfish, traveller-centred desire to soak cultures and impressions, and only rarely produces &#8220;value-added <em>real importance</em>&#8220;.</p><p>The importance of self-development and gaining experience becomes evident when it comes to the <em>actual use</em> of one&#8217;s knowledge. If the knowledge/experience/impressions just cannot, or will not be used &#8211; then it&#8217;s a waste of time.</p><p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p><p>There are four points, serving as <em>real importance</em> approximations for me: strive for the changes to the better in whatever you are doing, do the good in your everyday life, pass on your worldview (principles, ideas, the best you could come to during lifetime), and exercise useful self-development (which is necessary to grasp more features of the world, for a more complete and reliable view).</p><p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p><p>This is clearly incomplete. Additions and corrections are due, for a lifetime.</p><p><a
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isPermaLink="false">http://bogdan.org.ua/2007/10/30/ukrainian-web-portal-bigmirnet-switched-from-own-free-email-service-to-gmail.html</guid> <description><![CDATA[Just a minute ago, I was shocked after logging in to mail.bigmir.net: instead of the bigmir&#8217;s own, HTML-only email interface, I got redirected at the gmail&#8217;s &#8220;Terms and conditions&#8221;, after accepting which I found my emails in the classic gmail mailbox. First thing to think about: at least they did transfer all my emails to [&#8230;]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just a minute ago, I was shocked after logging in to mail.bigmir.net: instead of the bigmir&#8217;s own, HTML-only email interface, I got redirected at the gmail&#8217;s &#8220;Terms and conditions&#8221;, after accepting which I found my emails in the classic gmail mailbox.</p><p>First thing to think about: at least they did transfer all my emails to the new account.</p><p>Second: hey, they had given up their own email interface! Are they leaving the web-portal market of Ukraine? Was the part of their team (which later formed MI6) too important to handle their exodus with no consequences? Is that just a desire to give customers &#8220;better&#8221; interface and not invest anything into development?</p><p>I hope this won&#8217;t be a trend, for every service to have Google behind their servers. Or even just behind the name, to avoid extra complexity of having a server.</p><p>Finally, I think I&#8217;ll get used. But it was only yesterday, that I read the Google anti-utopia, where Big Brother&#8217;s name is (evidently) Google, and it&#8217;s webcams and microphones and search history define each person&#8217;s future AND guilt. Scary&#8230;</p><p>And I wonder which will be the next service of bigmir.net, &#8220;outsourced&#8221; like their email.</p><p><a
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