Non-Teleological Thinking

                   There is no meaning to life. Life has no inherent meaning. The meanings of our lives are chosen by what we feel and experience or are assigned to us by others. The ends of our existence cannot be foreseen and will not be limited by such things as destiny. These are the ideas and philosophies of those who believe life to be non- teleological. Teleos is a goal, teleological is goal- directed, non-teleological is non- goal directed. Teleology is the philosophical attempt to describe things in terms of their apparent purpose, directive principle or goal.
                   A famous literary example of a non-teleology is a man named John Steinbeck. Throughout his life Steinbeck  experimented with Darwinism, transcendentalism, realism, socialism, naturalism, and Josm. Each of these ways of thinking show up in Steinbeck's philosophy and therefore his work cannot be classified specifically. For instance, we do not use a knife to cut the objects because the blade is sharp, we made the knife in order to cut the objects. But teleologists admit that there are objects that are non-teleological. Steinbeck was correct in thinking that as a non-teleological thinker he must also take into account the teleological outlook on life.

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