In the absence of strategical choices just do nothing - it's always better to wait (and waiting is hard) rather than to act emotionally and without proper reason. Anomalies revert, crises end, but premature actions lead to disasters. Ability to wait is an important skill to gain.
@softtail65 Birmingham Blues - Electric Light Orchestra
I've been across the ocean
To the south sea isles
Yeah, I travelled to the east and west
For miles and miles and miles
https://t.co/eMl0G1gftc
@softtail65 Mission - Electric Light Orchestra
For many days, we travelled from a distant place and time
To reach a place they call the planet Earth
https://t.co/S32ibmQ1tX
@QuestionAbyss No, you get an arranged perceived comfort zone that leads to long term atrophy of important survival skills and loss of adaptability. No pain no gain.
@QuestionAbyss You get some efficiency and attempted standardization, but you also get erosion of organic communication and empathy, erosion of creativity and arts, burnout.
@QuestionAbyss I don't think correctness as a term applies to irrationality of emotions, they may have cultural biases and attitudes impacting them. An emotion will gladly distort your perception of reality, weaponize your cultural biases, and ignore logic just to justify the chemical cocktail.
@hookskat@QuestionAbyss Emotion on its own is an external symptom of underlying response to events that happened in environment and had consequences. They are not an entity of their own. Emotions don't have behaviors, they are external symptomatics.
@QuestionAbyss Humanity and logic are incompatible. Emotional decision making mostly leads to failures (unless you're lucky), logic is much more rare, but has higher success rate. It's extremely rare and rather coincidental that "humanity succeeds with logic".