Wishful: Thinking.

17. Dez 2025,

Wishful: Thinking.
Wishful: Thinking.

Wishful thinking isn’t just a holiday tradition — it’s a year-round mindset. All year long, there are people who’ve made thinking itself their norm. Why, you ask?

Well, it’s nothing short of sensational that the act of thinking has become so popular.
Sometimes it spins like a washing machine on espresso, but hey — at least the system’s running.
Most importantly, thinking has been granted absolute freedom.
The synapses are on day pass.
In principle, anyway.

There’s just one tiny catch with free thinking:
Once thoughts turn into full sentences or even slogans, they’re only one step away from becoming public opinions.
Well look at that — what a wonderfully free world we live in.

Thoughts need fresh air and open space — they love to fly around and bump into open ears.
Some ears are quite happy to catch them, hoping for a little grain of wisdom in the mix.
And when someone takes the time to wrap those thoughts — the good, chewy ones — into a story, people listen.
Humans love stories, especially when they capture life’s moments with a wink and a well-turned phrase.

But some stories tell the wilder side of thinking —
that restless wish to let thoughts run free, only to try and chase them back in again.
A quick glance at world history over the past hundred years (or more) shows what happens when a thought gets legs.
Written or spoken, ideas have a habit of changing the course of humanity.
Every revolution, every revelation began with one — or a thousand — thoughts.
Motto: “Once upon a time, a thought went on a journey.

Thousands of years ago, guys like Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle hung around ancient Greece doing one thing all day: thinking.
To make their hobby sound more respectable, they called it philosophy.
They didn’t lay golden eggs, but they did lay the foundation for Western thought.
What they didn’t know: their ideas on ethics, politics, and metaphysics would keep the wish to think alive for millennia.

A couple thousand years later, a young man named Immanuel Kant picked up the torch.
He became a master of deliberate thinking.
Working on his Critique of Pure Reason, he revolutionized how humans understand knowledge and ethics.
Modern philosophy owes that man a lot.

Then there was Copernicus — the stargazer.
He dared to think: maybe the sun doesn’t revolve around the Earth after all.
Boom — instant controversy.
His theory shattered geocentric wishful thinking and launched an age of scientific discovery.

Charles Darwin took thinking out to nature — sketchbook in hand, pondering the origin of species.
His habit of observing and scribbling changed how we understand life itself.

Across the Atlantic, Thomas Jefferson had his own thoughts:
Society needed new ideals — liberty, equality, and democracy.
Those ideas sparked a declaration and built a nation.
Solid thinking, Tom.

And what about Tim Berners-Lee, who dreamed up the World Wide Web?
Without him, would we be calmer, saner, maybe even better read?
Now there’s a thought.
Either way, his invention radically changed how we talk, trade, and think as a species.

Hold on — I’ve got a few thoughts of my own knocking to get out.
How radical would it be if humanity once again saw itself as one community —
where every person, without exception, has the right and the wish to live a fair, thriving, and fulfilling life?

Too radical?

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