Stop letting society’s morals wreck your life!!!
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Prince Mr. Masaka ft. LIL JAN ~ Live Happy [Spain 🇪🇸 / Uganda 🇺🇬]
More LIL JAN & Prince Mr. Masaka
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I love seeing people singing or lip-syncing while they're driving. I recently drove past a full car of people that looked like a family. Parents and kids singing their hearts out with the windows down. It just brings a little bit of happiness into your life seeing them enjoy themselves so truly and presently.
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[Image ID: The Destiel confession meme edited so that Dean answers 'tumblr live is dead and it's my birthday' to Cas' 'I love you'. /End ID]
i know it's not the 24th everywhere yet but it's in australia etc. and also tumblr live is already gone so there's that
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Hedonism
The term “hedonism,” from the Greek word ἡδονή (hēdonē) for pleasure, refers to several related theories about what is good for us, how we should behave, and what motivates us to behave in the way that we do. All hedonistic theories identify pleasure and pain as the only important elements of whatever phenomena they are designed to describe. If hedonistic theories identified pleasure and pain as merely two important elements, instead of the only important elements of what they are describing, then they would not be nearly as unpopular as they all are. However, the claim that pleasure and pain are the only things of ultimate importance is what makes hedonism distinctive and philosophically interesting.
Philosophical hedonists tend to focus on hedonistic theories of value, and especially of well-being (the good life for the one living it). As a theory of value, hedonism states that all and only pleasure is intrinsically valuable and all and only pain is intrinsically not valuable. Hedonists usually define pleasure and pain broadly, such that both physical and mental phenomena are included. Thus, a gentle massage and recalling a fond memory are both considered to cause pleasure and stubbing a toe and hearing about the death of a loved one are both considered to cause pain. With pleasure and pain so defined, hedonism as a theory about what is valuable for us is intuitively appealing. Indeed, its appeal is evidenced by the fact that nearly all historical and contemporary treatments of well-being allocate at least some space for discussion of hedonism. Unfortunately for hedonism, the discussions rarely endorse it and some even deplore its focus on pleasure.
From https://iep.utm.edu/hedonism/
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