illusory

Madalyn 2022-04-21 09:02:50

It takes you a long time to get used to yourself, to accept yourself, and when you meet someone at some point, everything changes, your worldview and values ​​collapse in an instant, and you become the person you used to despise yourself. How ironic life is. Rational life is comedy, emotional life is tragedy. Thinking of this, those unfortunate people are often lost in their emotions, or, in other words, they can only touch the reality of existence by attaching to their emotions.
Lies are the mortal enemy of reason. For the dead rationalists, any lie has its flaws.
People can only be happy when they live in an illusion. It seems that a rational and happy life often runs counter to each other. We often pursue happiness through rational methods, but the results are often unsatisfactory. And this kind of happiness can only be obtained through illusion, and illusion is often woven by lies. How sarcastic.
At the end of the play, I don't understand why I want to marry him, is it to illustrate the victory of rationalism? Wouldn't the comic effect be better if it didn't appear: Isn't it more ironic that when a person gives up his rationalism and succumbs to the emotional, the originally emotional person becomes rational?
Existence has no meaning, so anyone who pursues the meaning of existence rationally is stupid. Perhaps such thinking is very negative or pessimistic, but it is often the case. Life is a moebius and everything you do may not improve your life.

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Extended Reading

Magic in the Moonlight quotes

  • Stanley: The comparison makes me laugh! Olivia is a person of accomplishment and charm. Sophie's a street finagler who makes her way living off one bit of hokum to the next.

    Aunt Vanessa: Well, I don't see how you can compare the two.

    Stanley: Well, don't put ideas into my head!

    Aunt Vanessa: Well, far be it from me!

    Stanley: Of course, she does come from dire circumstances. I mean, it's very easy to be judgmental about people who are born into circumstances less fortunate than one's own.

    Aunt Vanessa: Well, life is harsh. One must do what one must to survive.

    Stanley: Well put. And people do sometimes make the wrong choices, which they regret, even though no serious harm was done.

    Aunt Vanessa: Which of us has not made some blunders in life?

    Stanley: And there is a rather appealing quality about Sophie. Despite her disgusting behaviour.

    Aunt Vanessa: Yes, her smile is rather winning. Of course, it depends how much value you put on the purely physical.

    Stanley: Well, no, I... I, for one, esteem the higher virtues.

    Aunt Vanessa: Hmm... Beauty of the soul...

    Stanley: Although her eyes are rather pleasant to look into. And that she can be amusing, under the right circumstances.

    Aunt Vanessa: Oh, but Olivia is an educated, cultivated woman. One that befits a man of your artistic genius.

    Stanley: Yes, now, my genius must be factored in. On paper, there's really no reason to prefer Sophie to Olivia.

    Aunt Vanessa: Well, I would say the opposite.

    Stanley: ...And so your, your suggestion that I, I be honest with Olivia and tell her that as irrational as it seems, I've fallen in love with, with Sophie - that's a preposterous notion.

    Aunt Vanessa: It's lunacy.

    Stanley: ...Yet I can't help feeling that...

    Aunt Vanessa: ...That you love Sophie. Yes, I understand. You're puzzled and bewildered; because your foolish logic tells you that you should love Olivia.

    Stanley: Foolish logic?

    Aunt Vanessa: And yet, how little that logic means when placed next to Sophie's smile...

    Stanley: What are you saying?

    Aunt Vanessa: ...That the world may or may not be without purpose, but it's not totally without some kind of magic.

    Stanley: ...I have irrational positive feelings for Sophie Baker. It's like witnessing a trick I can't figure out.

  • Aunt Vanessa: Which of us has not made some blunders in life?