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Not in a general sense. Not that Stephen Hawking being a 'deep thinker' in astrophysics translates to him having deep feelings about art for example. But wouldn't you say him thinking deeply about the universe allows him to feel more deeply about it?

Do we need to think deeply about a subject to really feel deeply about it?

2006-11-04 06:50:54 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

12 answers

no if you wer brane dead you could still feall deaply

2006-11-04 06:54:02 · answer #1 · answered by loboe27 4 · 0 1

Seeing something is a good start to feel something about it.
We could think deeply about a subject as long as we have felt something the first time we run into it.
How could we feel anything for something we haven't´t noticed at all?

But then, the spirit exists. It goes into us and makes us feel that it´s in us. You can not figured out how it comes, but you feel it.
It´s then the spirit, who takes you roaming around the universe and if you see things through its eyes, you will almost glow, and the universe will look to you as you never imagined.

2006-11-04 07:17:02 · answer #2 · answered by Yasam 3 · 0 0

Although you have a point (that sometimes thinking deeply leads to feeling deeply), on other occasions thinking deeply just removes us from both direct experience and feeling.

2006-11-04 07:23:22 · answer #3 · answered by todaywiserthanyesterday 4 · 0 0

You are a "bad" Buddhist. Thinkers are often aloof personalities.
That's why we get personality conflicts between signs. Air signs for instance are more likely to work out their emotions in their mind. Where waters signs express their feelings. Which causes one to think the other overdoes it, and the other thinks the one has no feeling at all.

2006-11-04 07:06:09 · answer #4 · answered by zenbuddhamaster 4 · 1 0

That's quite powerful force! it shows you truly understand the subject at hand. It shows you can read the truth between words and can be part of you seamlessly. You would see sharing rather arguing/bashing a better alternative. Am I right?

2006-11-04 07:32:57 · answer #5 · answered by Frontal Lobe 4 · 0 0

thinking more deeply without respect for TheMaker and Creator of all things, will only possibly result in a more subtle lying to yourself and others. so no! deep thinking does not in itself guarentee truth, in any thing you think about. and may* only result in greater deception of yourself. in disrespect of a true reference point. since using your self as the reference is called vanity.

2006-11-04 07:00:13 · answer #6 · answered by yehoshooa adam 3 · 0 1

There is an axiom in metaphysics that one cannot love what one does not know.

One's love of something only inclines to what is first present in the intellect.

The deeper the truth that one knows, the more powerful one's love in response to it can be.




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2006-11-04 06:58:49 · answer #7 · answered by Catholic Philosopher 6 · 1 0

generally speaking think so but every once in a while there is the
" ah hah " thought that hits a person.

2006-11-04 07:20:07 · answer #8 · answered by Marvin R 7 · 0 0

Nope. I think way too much and feel absolutely nothing.

2006-11-04 06:53:59 · answer #9 · answered by badkitty1969 7 · 0 0

That makes sense to me.

2006-11-04 06:52:56 · answer #10 · answered by mynickname 3 · 0 0

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