> Personally, I feel like it promotes the life-objective point of view. Work, be successful, die.
What about: learn and work, solve some important problems for people around you or make their lives somehow better, die? I much prefer this outlook to both "life-objective point of view" you mentioned and the IMO nihilistic "enjoy every moment", "focus on family and relationships" lifestyle.
>I much prefer this outlook to both "life-objective point of view" you mentioned and the IMO nihilistic "enjoy every moment", "focus on family and relationships" lifestyle.
This seems self-contradictory. If all the world's problems were solved, what would you do? That's what's properly valuable. If you don't do some of that before you die, how did you live a good life? You have to mix instrumental tasks and actually good things to do.
What about: learn and work, solve some important problems for people around you or make their lives somehow better, die? I much prefer this outlook to both "life-objective point of view" you mentioned and the IMO nihilistic "enjoy every moment", "focus on family and relationships" lifestyle.