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316 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2010
I don't feel those 101 things that are somewhere between pain, fear, and happiness, or between hunger and sleepiness. Which, the way I see it, is to my advantage.
I mean, I know that I am dimwitted, at least compared to standard humans. I know that on standard IQ tests I score somewhere between idiot and imbecile. But I have 3 virtues, and they are big ones.
1. I don't know how to lie.
2. I don't fantasize, so things that don't exist don't worry Me or hurt Me.
3. I know that I only know what I know, and that what I don't know - which is a lot more - I am sure I don't know.
And that, like I said, over the long run has given Me a big advantage over standard humans. [p.25]
The standard human world: a bubble where nothing that isn't human is really seen or heard, where only what's human matters and everything else is either background, or merchandise, or food. [p.30]
Descartes didn't write only about human thought. He also wrote, at the end of his life, a very short book on happiness, which I did read and which, unfortunately, is less famous than the others.
After many words and 24 pages, Descartes wrote that happiness is a matter of the senses. Seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, tasting: that is happiness. Then Descartes wrote many other pages full of words, which is a shame because he'd reached the truth on page 25.
Yes, the most basic, most happy form of happiness is simply feeling with your senses. Thinking with your eyes and skin and tongue and nose and ears. [p.107]