Nights awake: The know and do problem.

in philosophy •  7 years ago 

I know what to do but, If I don't do it, do I know?

This for me has been a question I have asked myself since I was quite young and the answer is straight forward but poses me problems.

The answer is: If I know what I should do but fail to actually act upon it, I do not know it well enough.

Knowing and doing are different and knowledge of something that should be done without the action to back it up is incomplete knowledge in my opinion. We may know what to do, but if we don't know how to get ourselves to do it, the knowledge is relatively useless as it is unable to make us change.

I would lay at night thinking about this especially when I failed to act ina way that was consistent with how I knew (even in the moment) I should have acted. In my young opinion, I let myself down as I was unable to overcome myself, I was my own roadblock.

Of course, this is not the whole story as essentially, we all do the best we can with the tools we have at that time and at those times, I didn't have the necessary skills to get over the walls. It of course doesn't mean that I would have failed 10 minutes earlier or later though but for some reason in those moments, I was compromised enough to manipulate my actions.

Sometimes when I write, I like to find some quotes that support my concept. I don't use quotes like motivational statements to throw away in the flick of a scroll thumb, I use them to bring in some more profound thoughts than my own.

As I was starting this, I found this one which I hadn't heard before:

Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better. ― Maya Angelou

This is quite an important one when I combine it with the mind of childhood where I tussled with the problem in the middle of the night. How can I find ways to act better when I already know I should?

The quote is both beautiful and true but without the thought to tease apart the difference between knowing and doing, it will fall short as most already understand the knowing part but struggle with the doing part.

And then there was this one:

I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough; we must do. -Leonardo da Vinci

Now, Da Vinci's use of impressed is in the form that it is a driving force that he must do. Action is a part of him and he cannot fall short of it as to stop at knowing only, is to fail at the last hurdle. he talks of willingness to act and that is akin to having the 'intentions' and we know that the smallest act is greater than the grandest intention, which is part of a quote attributed to several people including, Oscar Wilde.

The Da Vinci quote however energises me in some way, it makes me think that I must go further than my thoughts alone and start testing the boundaries of action, the space between steps in the process.

There are three steps to creation, thought, word and action and without the last, nothing can be made. This doesn't limit the action to the person who thought and spoke though does it? But, to overcome myself as I must to do what I know, the action condition of creation must be my own. No one can do it for me, no matter the quality of their advice or the forcefulness of their words.

Here is another quote I came across in my search that I haven't seen before:

How do you know you're going to do something, untill you do it? -J. D. Salinger

Now, this one speaks volumes in so few words and ties in the past and future problems we face by not acting in the now. It talks of assumptions and expectations and how we so often confuse intention with action itself. It also hints at the fundamentals of learning as 'when you do it, you will know' comes into play.

There is so much said in the unsaid of this that someone could write a book about those 13 words and still not be able to dive to the bottom of its depths.

And then, after all those words exploring and thinking and for the audience, reading, we would be right back at square one. Action is needed.

I remember laying there at night as maybe a thirteen or fourteen year old and coming to the conclusion that:

I do the best I can with what I know

It is not much of a quote I understand, but it has served me well as I have thought long and hard enough about what lies therein to transform it into an active force.

Change is the only constant and we are able to influence our own directions, reprogram our behaviours and even though we may never reach the lofty heights we aspire to, we can try. From a human perspective, knowledge is of a limited nature as there is always more for us to know and actions always have room for improvement for there is no perfect.

We are limited by what we know but through doing now, in the next moment we will know a little more and have a better swing in the now to come.

Taraz
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Indeed you really do not know until you act upon that which you know and do ensure you do the best with the knowledge or information you've acquired. For it is of no use if it's not used or acted upon. Thank you for sharing.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

knowledge indeed is just one piece of the pie. If it isn't backed with action, then it is just mere information.

now i'll sleep tonight and wake up with a "doing" mindset

thank you

I will hit the hay also. another early morning and long day ahead. Sleep well.

thanks you once again, good night. dreamup some more inspiration for tomorrow .

lol

first of all thank you for the post i totally agree with you knowledge is never enough, having knowledge without acting will never be enough.

why there is a phrase that says "it is better to try than to regret and ask me what would have happened if I tried"

Interesting one to reflect upon. For sure you don't know if you don't do it. If indeed you can't get yourself to do it, the knowledge will be wasted and actually there is nothing that would prove you had the knowledge if you didn't act upon it.
These two quotes have actually inspired me more

Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better. ― Maya Angelou

How do you know you're going to do something, untill you do it? -J. D. Salinger

Am going to move with these two quotes to push me whenever I feel lazy on doing something I have knowledge in. This shows one has got to keep performing all the entire time because knowing best is impossible. You can only know better and do better with what you know until something better comes up..And the cycle keeps on and on.

Thanks for pushing us with this post @tarazkp

Usually when I intend to do something, I do it. It might take longer than originally planned, or may happen as planned, but it will happen. My Intents always materialize into actions.

Amazing post I liked it thanks for sharing

that is why we have to do everything we can and want to do without hesitation

Wow @tarazkp. 99% of humans am sure are always found wanting in this case.

Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better. ― Maya Angelou

In my opinion, the reason people wouldn't want to do certain things as at when necessary is because they are scared they might be proven wrong by someone else who knows better. This is the reason most of us don't learn new things... Fear factor. We keep originating and waiting until we know it all, even when there is no time for second thoughts.

risk and live the life

I see it from another perspective. I really like to cook and I have seen a lot of recipes online, common things, but sadly I don't have the money to try anything, and if I had the money there's no food on the market

But I like to watch a lot of videos on food and general culinary arts, and I think I have a pretty decent knowledge, I just need to find the moment to execute what I've learned

Great post

awesome post, upvoted ,follow and resteem

The older I get, the more difficult this subject becomes to me, and then again sometimes it doesn't and experience makes it easier to actually feel I do know something, and I choose NOT to do anything. I do think both doing and choosing to not do something ties in perfectly with the conclusion you reached: "I do the best I can with what I know".

My journey in life brought me from "if I think something needs to be done, I better do it myself so it gets done right" to "If I cannot cooperate with others and trust other people's viewpoints it doesn't matter so much what I do".

When I started on my latest twist in my history to apply permaculture I was confronted with "it's better to observe for a hundred hours to decide to work for a few hours, than to only observe for a few hours and thoughtlessly work for a hundred." In combination with: "always aim for the smallest changes that have the biggest effect".

Life has a flow, like a steady stream. If you try to constantly go against it, it will wear you off. Thoughtless labour will do the same. In some oriental culture (I forgot which one) they have a philosophy called "the art of not doing", which is quite interesting. In medical science there is the principle "do no harm" (although the profit motive has reduced the importance of that principle a lot unfortunately).

The law of unintended consequences is always with us when we act. Maybe being thoughtful and having a focus on exploration or observation is better than saying we have to always act to be of value.

I'm going through these thoughts a lot these years. Yes actions speak louder than words, but wisdom is not only about acting. Sometimes it is better not to act.

Complicated stuff :-) ...

Unless you take action on what you know you will not fully understand it. The knowledge that we have will still depend on how we have used it and and have the actual first hand experience on it.
Thank you @tarazkp for sharing this. :)

Three key words.
Thought
Words
Action.

Thoughts are like ideas. It can come and go within a twinkle.
Most times I get to write them down so I won't miss the whole idea or loose it.
I get to write them down or confess (speak) them.

Words Fuel actions. Words are powerful. Most times I could be so lazy that all I do is just to speak constantly to myself and I'll be like "Regina, go and fix the bulb" "Regina, go and watch the dishes" and if I constantly say it, I end up doing it.

And lastly, without action, NOTHING can be done.
It takes action to build. It takes action to be fulfilled. Action brings satisfaction.

Inaction brings regrets.

I learned from this post and I'm saying Thank you @tarazkp

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a good post and very useful for us, hopefully you can provide this post to us again

Great conclusion. I live by it as well.
I do my best with whatever it is that I'm doing and if I fail, I know that I did my best and I learn from that mistake to try again and if I succeed, I know what I did was good and I can review it to improve.

I do the best I can with what I know

How do you know it’s the best you can do if you restrict yourself to what you know?

Your knowledge is the limitation if you don’t allow yourself the creativity to apply that what you "don’t know" and to fail.

It isn’t about what you know, it’s about being creative enough to apply it in different ways and discover what is the best.

Thinking about this, I realized that there is an excuse for knowing but not doing - that you know why you're not doing it. If you know what you should do, but don't actually do it, I think you must have a solid reason why you're not doing it.