Logic?
Sometimes, I try having logical conversations with people. And I almost always fail because, it turns out, logic isn't my favourite attribute of a conversation. And from my experience, its not people's favourite either. Because logic would mean coming to a decision that makes sense for both parties involved.
Hello there, I'm the Earthian.
Logic would make us comply with eachother, consent to one another because the choice made by one would make sense to the other. But then it struck me. Does it have to be this way? I mean, sure, coming to truce with people at some point in time is crucial, whether we like it or not, because constantly being on the verge of having a verbal war is just too draining, to say the very least about it. But the sheer idea that "making sense with logic" feels really off because sometimes, most times, I find myself being lured into doing things that don't in the least make sense. And these turn out to be things I like doing. So I guess, confining logic to that which makes sense doesn't really make sense.
The point I'm trying to make is that whatever is supposedly obvious is only supposedly obvious, no matter how logical they sound. Because our sense of logic, or sense of obviousness, our sense of deduction, our intuitions, our behaviours and just about everything else about us is so much more than what we confine it to. Rights and wrongs are mere perspectives. Same goes with logic. Logic is merely a perspective. Granted, a perspective that usually associates itself with the majority, but that doesn't make it right. Its individualistic. Its unique. A shadow of who we are individually is what our logics are.
Lots of love, peace.
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