TheFixer14
Senior Don Juan
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2016
- Messages
- 352
- Reaction score
- 150
- Age
- 32
I touched upon this briefly in one of my journal entries. But I've been taking a master acting class and the thing that hinders me in a scene sometimes is that I think too much. Instead of just allowing myself to "be" and react to my partner sometimes I get too into how something is supposed to be and "act" instead.
I realized that I do this in my everyday life. I'll get into my head and think that I have to do this or things have to be this way and etc etc. Being cerebral and being logical have it's place. When you are playing chess. When you are solving a math problem. But the more I live the more I realize that our brains are really our worst enemy.
Emotions are the key to life. They are the key to persuasion, motivation, and the human experience. Its. This is what gets to us at our very core. This is why we love things like art, music, and film. They appeal to our emotion. Ever watch a movie that you couldn't get into or thought an actor was missing something? It's because the movie and the actor were too logical, too mechanical, and didn't appeal to your emotions. They left you feeling cold. While we all love to be entertained, what really moves us are the films from a director that come from their soul. Or a performance from actor that says "here I am!" If you want something logical, that's what books are for.
Logic will NEVER bring innovation or change. Look at Steve Jobs. He was not a very logical man. But he was a genius. Why? He moved our emotions. He made us want to be apart of be apart of his club. He made us all feel like we belonged somewhere exclusive even though we millions of people use Apple products. He knew that with the right design that he could convey the right emotion.
Having a strong imagination and being creative are also apart of the human experience. And being logical goes against this. A lot of things that are imaginative and creative are not always rational. Most people scoffed at the idea of cars, films, films with sound, films with color, television, the internet, and etc.
If you are too logical you will also not be able to see others perspective. And this a major key to empathy.
Others issues with logic is that it assumes that all problems are reducible to logic. Basically that it only exists in rational terms. Problems with emotional components cannot be solved with rational thinking.
Human thinking is also very limited to the tools that we have at hand. And rational decision making is comparative.
I remember reading one of the latest chapters of Attack on Titan. In it a major thing happen where two characters were on the brink of death and there was a serum that could turn one of them into a titan, have them eat a shifter who betrayed them, and he would live. One guy was the leader who had lost an arm, was in his 30s, while the other was a 15 year old boy genius. The logical decision here would be to bring the leader back to life. Even though the 15 year old boy genius has the potential to surpass him, the leader is already at a point where he can confidently make moves.
But the guy that was given the decision decided to not be so pragmatic about it. He looked at his leader and saw a smile on his face. He was finally about to leave this hell. He remembered how he overhead the 15 year old boy genius speak about how seeing the ocean was his dream. He decided to save the 15 year old boy genius.
He made an emotional decision. If he had went the other way I would have hated the character. But he made a decision that showed that he had heart and warmth.
Isn't this what being human is all about?
I realized that I do this in my everyday life. I'll get into my head and think that I have to do this or things have to be this way and etc etc. Being cerebral and being logical have it's place. When you are playing chess. When you are solving a math problem. But the more I live the more I realize that our brains are really our worst enemy.
Emotions are the key to life. They are the key to persuasion, motivation, and the human experience. Its. This is what gets to us at our very core. This is why we love things like art, music, and film. They appeal to our emotion. Ever watch a movie that you couldn't get into or thought an actor was missing something? It's because the movie and the actor were too logical, too mechanical, and didn't appeal to your emotions. They left you feeling cold. While we all love to be entertained, what really moves us are the films from a director that come from their soul. Or a performance from actor that says "here I am!" If you want something logical, that's what books are for.
Logic will NEVER bring innovation or change. Look at Steve Jobs. He was not a very logical man. But he was a genius. Why? He moved our emotions. He made us want to be apart of be apart of his club. He made us all feel like we belonged somewhere exclusive even though we millions of people use Apple products. He knew that with the right design that he could convey the right emotion.
Having a strong imagination and being creative are also apart of the human experience. And being logical goes against this. A lot of things that are imaginative and creative are not always rational. Most people scoffed at the idea of cars, films, films with sound, films with color, television, the internet, and etc.
If you are too logical you will also not be able to see others perspective. And this a major key to empathy.
Others issues with logic is that it assumes that all problems are reducible to logic. Basically that it only exists in rational terms. Problems with emotional components cannot be solved with rational thinking.
Human thinking is also very limited to the tools that we have at hand. And rational decision making is comparative.
I remember reading one of the latest chapters of Attack on Titan. In it a major thing happen where two characters were on the brink of death and there was a serum that could turn one of them into a titan, have them eat a shifter who betrayed them, and he would live. One guy was the leader who had lost an arm, was in his 30s, while the other was a 15 year old boy genius. The logical decision here would be to bring the leader back to life. Even though the 15 year old boy genius has the potential to surpass him, the leader is already at a point where he can confidently make moves.
But the guy that was given the decision decided to not be so pragmatic about it. He looked at his leader and saw a smile on his face. He was finally about to leave this hell. He remembered how he overhead the 15 year old boy genius speak about how seeing the ocean was his dream. He decided to save the 15 year old boy genius.
He made an emotional decision. If he had went the other way I would have hated the character. But he made a decision that showed that he had heart and warmth.
Isn't this what being human is all about?