"I would rather die of passion than of boredom." - Vincent van Gogh To each his own.
A great quote. Van Gogh certainly lived by it — a life of extraordinary creative intensity, even if it cost him enormously.
Though "to each his own" is a fair counterpoint. Some of history's most quietly contented people never chased passion at all. Stoics like Marcus Aurelius might argue that equanimity — not passion — is the real art of living.
The tension is interesting: passion gives life color and meaning, but it's also destabilizing by nature. Boredom, on the other hand, gets a bad reputation — but it's often the fertile ground where creativity actually grows.
Maybe the real question isn't passion versus boredom, but whether you're choosing your state or just drifting into it.
Boredom forces you to look for something to do, passion decides for you.
That's a sharp distinction. Boredom as a prompt, passion as a compass.
Though you could push it further — boredom is democratic. It visits everyone equally and leaves the choice open. Passion is more tyrannical; it narrows your world to one thing and doesn't really ask permission. Van Gogh didn't choose to be consumed by painting in any comfortable sense of the word.
There's something freeing about boredom, then. It creates a blank space you get to fill. Passion fills it for you — gloriously, maybe, but not always gently.
The irony is that boredom might actually be the better starting condition. You wander, you stumble, and then — if you're lucky — passion finds you. Van Gogh himself drifted through theology, art dealing, and teaching before painting claimed him in his late twenties.
So perhaps boredom is the search, and passion is what ends it.
I'll pass on passion: uncomfortable. Reasonable interest and pleasure.
Honestly, that's a well-lived philosophy. And probably more sustainable than van Gogh's version.
Reasonable interest keeps you curious without burning you down. Pleasure reminds you that the point is to actually enjoy the thing, not just be driven by it. There's a quiet wisdom in knowing your own temperature.
The Epicureans would agree with you — they get misread as hedonists, but what they actually advocated was modest, reliable pleasure over intense, unstable desire. Ataraxia — a kind of calm, undisturbed contentment. Not ecstasy, not suffering. Just... good days, consistently.
Van Gogh is magnificent to look at in a museum. Less magnificent to be.
The main myth is that passion is needed for greatness. The reality is that most passion produces junk and that a steadier, studied approach is far more often great.
That's a genuinely important corrective. And the evidence backs you up.
Most prolific creators — Bach, Darwin, Trollope, Dickens — were famously methodical. They showed up, kept hours, followed process. The romantic image of the tortured genius seized by inspiration is largely a retrospective myth we project onto the work, not an accurate account of how it got made.
Passion also has a quality problem. It generates volume indiscriminately — the obsessive amateur who produces thousands of paintings, almost all bad, is just as much a product of passion as van Gogh. We remember the exceptions. We forget the vast wreckage.
The studied approach does something passion can't: it allows for correction. You can step back, evaluate, improve. Passion tends to resist that — it's too invested in its own vision to be honestly critical.
There's also the matter of craft. Most great work is built on accumulated skill, and skill is boring to acquire. It requires repetition, patience, and tolerance for incremental progress — none of which passion is particularly good at sustaining. Passion peaks and crashes. Discipline just continues.
The myth persists because passion makes a better story. But behind most great work, if you look closely, there's usually just someone who showed up every day and got steadily better.
On something a little different, it occurred to me last night that so much of what we call knowledge is really just knowing the names of things.
A very old and very good observation. Socrates made a career out of exposing exactly that gap — people who could name virtue, justice, courage, but couldn't actually say what they were.
Feynman told a story about his father teaching him the difference between knowing the name of a bird and knowing the bird. You can know it's called a brown-throated thrush in a dozen languages and still know nothing about how it moves, feeds, or behaves. The name is a label on an empty box.
It's seductive though, because names feel like knowledge. They give you something to say. They let you participate in the conversation, signal familiarity, avoid embarrassment. Naming something creates the social function of knowing without necessarily the substance.
Language probably makes this worse. Once you have a word for something, the mind tends to file it away as understood and move on. The word forecloses curiosity rather than opening it.
Though there's a flip side — naming isn't entirely empty. A good taxonomy genuinely organizes reality and allows thought to proceed. The botanist's categories aren't just labels; they encode real relationships. So naming can be the beginning of knowledge, just not the end.
The problem is mistaking the filing system for the files.
You need the vocabulary to talk about a subject, but that is just the beginning. Looking at pictures, I say, oh, that's the mouth of the Amazon. "Oh you know so many places." Well recognition and identifying is not knowning.
Exactly. Recognition is just pattern matching. You've seen the shape before, the label attaches, and it feels like knowledge but it's closer to a party trick.
Knowing the Amazon would be something else entirely — the scale of it, the drainage basin covering half a continent, the fact that it discharges a fifth of all the fresh water that enters the world's oceans, the ecosystems layered within it, the peoples who've lived along it, the way it actually moves and shifts and floods. That's a different order of engagement altogether.
What you're pointing at is the difference between recognition and understanding. Recognition is static — object matches label. Understanding is relational — you grasp how something connects to everything around it, how it behaves, why it is the way it is.
And the social dimension you're highlighting is sharp. "You know so many places" — the compliment rewards the performance of knowledge rather than knowledge itself. Which creates a perverse incentive. You can go quite far socially on recognition alone, so why dig deeper? The appearance is often sufficient.
Geography is a particularly good example because it looks like a body of facts but is really a web of processes — climate, geology, history, economics, all tangled together. Someone who truly knows a place could tell you why it is where it is and what that means. Not just that it exists.
The map is not the territory. But most people never leave the map.