Solf J Kimblee (
explosivecombat) wrote2012-10-04 01:10 am
Entry tags:
NIETZSCHE; DEAD PHILOSOPHERS' INBOX
The offer for conversation is always open, should you desire to take me up on it; I can't guarantee that I'll respond immediately, nor will it necessarily be the response you want, but I'll always respond in some way.
In the name of enlightened discourse.

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But I understand. I'll leave it alone.
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You mentioned that I wouldn't lose anything from having something I never use, which is a fair point. In your opinion, however, does one lose something from not taking the opportunity in the first place, whether it's used or not?
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I remember the last time I voiced that logic about a given situation, too.
But since it's strictly my opinion you want, I suppose I feel as though it does? If nothing else, you've lost an opportunity to further pursue your potential, and if you only stand to gain something from it, I'm honestly not sure why you wouldn't.
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Define "potential" for me, though, with regards to the way you keep using it.
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There's a quote I like very much, from a well-renowned poet in my world: "Only those who will risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go." I think that's what potential is — the "how far one can go". I've spent most of my life doing things simply to see if I can, and when I succeed I set my sights higher and keep going because...
...I suppose I'm just not sure what else there is to do with life, if not to keep testing the experience to see what you're capable of.
Leonardo da Vinci was a painter, a sculptor, an architect, a musician, a mathematician, an engineer, an inventor, an anatomist, a geologist, a cartographer, a botanist, a writer...a person could be satisfied excelling at any one of those pursuits, but he showed that it's capable to have all of them. If there really are limits somewhere to what a single person can do, then I suppose potential is what defines those outermost limits.