Our Previous Dreams example essay topic

980 words
No matter what I do or what I think, suffering will always occur no matter what my choices are. According to Fyodor Dostoevsky, the author of the Grand Inquisitor", There will be thousands of millions of happy babes, and a hundred thousand sufferers who have taken upon themselves the curse of the knowledge of good and evil (17)". Or in other words, there will always be suffering and evil, when there is happiness and goodness. In the world today millions of people suffer, innocent people who don't deserve to die, and people who aren't suffering live on. In the end everyone who was happy and good will be "allured with the reward of heaven and eternity (17) ", or will they? In my view of life there is always a plan that everyone follows, and whatever he or she does or doesn't do, it was meant to happen.

I guess you could call it fate. As a young adult I have had some revelations about eternal recurrence, though I hadn't read Nietzsche before, my idea was eerily similar. This similar idea came to me when I was perhaps in eighth grade. As I was sitting at home one evening I began to contemplate about death, after seeing some movies that involved death and the afterlife. I then asked myself what if I am is the really intense dream where I can wake up only to event of my tragic death, and when that happens I will only find myself where I started; thinking I am in a dream. The movie "The Matrix" further raised my interest in my idea of dreaming.

In "The Matrix", a computer hacker named Neo is chosen by a group of rebels to be given the knowledge of the truth that he has only been dreaming, and in a sense relates back to my idea. Even though they differ in some aspects the main idea remains; we are living in world that has become blanketed in front of our ever-ignorant eyes and shields us from ever finding the true meaning of life. What is life? Will we ever find out? I think we never will.

As soon as we come even remotely close we will end up dying and waking up in some other dream, and when will we ever awaken? According to Nietzsche, we will never wake up; we will end up repeating our life over and over forever. He calls this idea, "eternal recurrence". This idea has broadened my visions of what the future has in store for me. I have always believed that whatever I do or whatever happens to me does so for a reason, good or bad, and there is "no greater power on earth than good or evil (170) ". Good and evil always occurs equally and separately.

If I lose a personal item that I loved I will find some thing just as lovable and the feelings of loss, but not the memory of the first, will be extinguished. These sorts of ideas of good always equaling evil, even apply to the situation of a young suffering and dying from an illness. She will wake up realizing that her suffering was only a nightmare. After waking from this dream she will only awaken from these two dreams, which in fact was on e whole dream just with more parts, and she will begin with the nightmare and so on, with absolutely no memory that she has gone through this before. Another question I keep asking myself after reading Nietzsche is", Could d'ej'a vou be some kind of glitch in our minds that somehow remembers things that have happened before in our previous dreams? I believe so, because after been apparently have dreamt the same life for an eternity, wouldn't our mind remember instances from previous dreams; perhaps that's what the other huge fraction of the brain is for.

We don't use all our brain, because we might remember our previous lives and end up ruling the world from knowing everything that has happened and everything that will happen. Someone or something has prevented this from happening. Maybe if we could use our full brainpower we could become gods. People are becoming more and more smarter than ever and we are finding new ways to enhance our brain usage. Once we have obtained full usage do we then become gods? Hence may be able to create a god, but Nietzsche would disagree with my statement.

He believes that we should not reach beyond our creative will, and who's he to tell us what to do. He also states that god or gods don't exist because human limitations block us from the truth. The truth that we can do anything that we want, anything is possible. He even says that we are "lovers of knowledge". Knowledge can feed our minds and help us to become gods, if in fact that happens when we use all of our sponge we call a brain.

Every day that I wake up I become more aware that life is short, and I could die any minute, and so I would want to do something fun and exciting, because if I do something stupid I might die and I'd have to relive that moment again, and even worse I might have d'ej'a vou and remember that I've already went through it. If I live my life as well as I can I know I will enjoy my life after I die which then be the life I've already experienced only I won't know; just only through d'ej'a vou. The Portable Nietzsche The grand Inquisitor.