What decorations do you think looks best on boxer shorts.....penguins or dollar signs?
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Penguins.What decorations do you think looks best on boxer shorts.....penguins or dollar signs?
The username comes from the word penumbra, rather than from the video game title Penumbra.
Just the eyes?The only picture I have posted here is this: (picture of my eyes with contrast turned up, sort of looks weird because it makes the bridge of my nose disappear)
http://www.religiousforums.com/forum/2562070-post4506.html
Thanks for the answer. The reason I asked is that whenever someone's avatar is a picture of a human, that's how I picture the person as looking, no matter how often I remind myself that they may not look like that at all. (For the first year I was here, I pictured Jay as looking like Groucho Marx. )I'm caucasian, fairly small, light build, medium length straight brown hair, brown eyes.
So I guess the answer would be that I don't particularly look like that, but the build and facial structure is close enough that I could probably dress as her for Halloween or something pretty convincingly.
I have been a vegetarian for many years, including when the OP was written, though in the past few months I have been eating a bit of fish once in a while, which makes me a pesceterian.Is being a vegetarian cheaper than not being one?
What are the benefits (however you want to define it) of being a vegetarian?
Not sure.If you would compare yourself with some animal (symbolicaly or something like that ) which animal would you be?
Yes, and I think it's a great read.have you read the nichomachean ethics?
A DIR is a Discuss Individual Religion subforum. On the home page, if you scroll down, you'll see the DIR subforums. These are areas for specific groups, like Buddhists, Hindus, Christians, or Muslims, and other groups, to have a place for themselves where they can discuss aspects of their faith. Non-members of those groups can only post respectful questions, so it's a place that is mainly for use by members of that group and also a source of knowledge for other people.Hi there Penumbra...What is DIR? Thanks
I must say, this site is the most organized, well put together I have encountered so far. I`m relatively new to message boards and only been using the computer for about 2 years. Kudos to you people for a job well done.A DIR is a Discuss Individual Religion subforum. On the home page, if you scroll down, you'll see the DIR subforums. These are areas for specific groups, like Buddhists, Hindus, Christians, or Muslims, and other groups, to have a place for themselves where they can discuss aspects of their faith. Non-members of those groups can only post respectful questions, so it's a place that is mainly for use by members of that group and also a source of knowledge for other people.
Your title says you're a Buddhist, so for example, here is the Buddhist DIR:
Buddhism DIR - Religious Education Forum
Well, thanks. ^-^How do you cope with learning and understanding multiple complex issues, whether they're Philosophical, Political, Economic, Engineering-related etc?
I ask because you seem to know a great deal about a lot of things, and have formed perspectives which appear deep, experienced and insightful.
I've generally felt intellectually overwhelmed when attempting to learn advanced mathematics and advanced physics such as quantum mechanics. Part of it is related to interest- I tend to learn better at things that interest me, and to have more difficulty when I feel apathetic about something. When numbers literally start becoming imaginary, my interest begins to wobble.Do you ever feel mentally/intellectually overwhelmed - especially when trying to fit Ethics into the equation?
Penumbra said:My interest in philosophy and politics likely comes from hardship in my life. I experienced homelessness as a child, and grew up in relative poverty.
I was also rather sickly, and continue to have health problems to this day, requiring surgeries and medicines, despite keeping myself physically fit.
So from early on, I started being more interested than perhaps most people are, in questions like what's the meaning of life, or what is a just society, or what are the best strategies to cope with suffering or improve well-being, especially for things that seem out of our control. So I read a lot of philosophy like Aristotle, Plato, Socrates, Stoics, Epicureans, then later European ones like Kant, Locke, Nietzsche, Spinoza, Camus, Sartre, Mill, Bentham, then going into America with Emerson and others. To stay relatively efficient, usually what I would do is read a lot about them, like detailed overviews (the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy tends to be a good start), and then for ones that interest me more thoroughly, I would read some of their works and research them more directly, and compare differences and similarities. Then for religion and spirituality I read the Old Testament, New Testament, some non-canon early Christian writings, the Tao Te Ching, the Qur'an, some Buddhist sutras and other info about Buddhism, the Bhagavad Gita, the Mukhya Upanishads, some stuff from pantheists or New Age, and so on. And then for politics, it can pretty much be broken down into economics and civil rights, so I research a lot about both.
Sometimes it just seems that living in the modern world, is inherently kind of a losing battle