- Thread starter
- #1
You asked for a philosophy thread you got one.
I've had this discussion multiple times with multiple people, and the outcome is usually hours of skype chatting ending with one person falling asleep >.>
My own personal opinion is that human nature is being selfish, being greedy and only helping people when you actually have a use for them. Sure, there are exceptions but how many compared to the other number? One day we're just going to kill eachother, we've already seen the start of it, innocent people get killed every day because of their beliefs, because of profit, and those who profit out of this, in the end will end up lying on the street like dogs.
I've always liked to think of H.G. Wells' "The Time Machine" as a symbol of how the world looks. Those little quiet and peaceful beings on the surface are the rich, while those monsters as they're called in the underground are the poor, and every night these monsters eat these "innocent" little beings, when in reality they're the reason the monsters are like this. I like to think of the man with the time machine as a God, taking into consideration the religions, watching us, watching how we kill eachother until there's nothing left. And when this same man returns to the Earth so many years after, there are no humanoids on Earth, just animals.
Continue the discussion onwards.
I've had this discussion multiple times with multiple people, and the outcome is usually hours of skype chatting ending with one person falling asleep >.>
My own personal opinion is that human nature is being selfish, being greedy and only helping people when you actually have a use for them. Sure, there are exceptions but how many compared to the other number? One day we're just going to kill eachother, we've already seen the start of it, innocent people get killed every day because of their beliefs, because of profit, and those who profit out of this, in the end will end up lying on the street like dogs.
I've always liked to think of H.G. Wells' "The Time Machine" as a symbol of how the world looks. Those little quiet and peaceful beings on the surface are the rich, while those monsters as they're called in the underground are the poor, and every night these monsters eat these "innocent" little beings, when in reality they're the reason the monsters are like this. I like to think of the man with the time machine as a God, taking into consideration the religions, watching us, watching how we kill eachother until there's nothing left. And when this same man returns to the Earth so many years after, there are no humanoids on Earth, just animals.
Continue the discussion onwards.