99% of the questions people ask in their 20s and early 30s are roughly the same seemingly “important” ones everybody has always asked at those ages. And 99% come up with roughly the same answers ranging from pretty dumb to reasonably smart regardless of effort.
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And never let seeming triviality or unimportance stop you from investing demented amounts of energy into the answers. Even if everybody thinks you’re crazy. Novelty never wears its significance and hidden value on the cover.
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If you are mediocrity then the bell curve just shifted massively
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For "age-old but abandoned/rarely asked questions are different, almost as good as new, but rarely as easy," see Ralph Austin Powell's "Freely Chosen Reality." Absolute revolution in empirical philosophical method and in the history of realism.
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Good thread. Bonus thought: Another good way to find new questions is to extend old ones "How to do X" has been done to death "How to do X with Y constraint" can be new and exciting
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How about this one: E=mc² - If earth heats up due to climate change, doesn't this increase the mass, by that its gravitation and so the likelihood of an meteorite impact --- probably the same reason why farting dinosaurs
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Lies, damned lies, and statistics. Your point in this thread is interesting and new (to me) and has absolutely no relevance to (my) life
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