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Ryan Martsi's avatar

I really appreciate the distinction you’re drawing between studying philosophy and actually using it. The gap you identify is real — especially the way academic philosophy often stops at analysis without guiding lived integration. Your emphasis on embodiment rather than abstract originality is refreshing.

One question your framework raises for me is how a micro-philosophy holds up inside highly structured environments. If someone clarifies their values and worldview, but lives within systems that subtly shape attention, incentives, and even identity, does the work of building a personal philosophy become more urgent — or more constrained? I’m increasingly interested in how individual philosophical agency interacts with large-scale structural forces. Curious how you think about that tension.

Dr. Bronce Rice's avatar

Such an interesting post on so many different levels Paul. I'll merely say in regard to my own personal thinking - Do my thoughts and actions help me alleviate aspects of suffering, in other words help me feel better in some fashion and are they good for my health and wellness. I try to use these as guiding principles.

Oh, and your first 3 questions!

1) I didn't choose the principles more fully until after I started writing my first book. Meaning, aspects of it were handed down to me...the first part about alleviating suffering. The second part is the harder piece to pull off for most of us. It is healthy + good for us.

2) My upbringing of course + then my 25+ years of training to become what some might call a healer or a psychologist and psychoanalyst. So how life works....something handed to us + plus, working with the clay we were given to mold it into something different.

3) lol - Depends on the day mate, but mostly I'm learning how to have it serve me.

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