When I think about certain philosophical issues I sometimes get very overwhelmed

When I think about certain philosophical issues I sometimes get very overwhelmed

When I think about certain philosophical issues I sometimes get very overwhelmed and feel I'm in the grip of a serious problem. For example, arguments skeptical about the external world, or other minds, or free will really cause anxiety. I believe, in these cases, that there is an external world, that there are minds other than my own, and that free will is a necessary, emergent component of phenomenological consciousness. Yet, when I hear arguments to the contrary I worry that perhaps I'm wrong, and I worry about the consequences. In general, it seems that most academic philosophers live their lives like ordinary people, and that they believe in things like free will, and they don't doubt that their children have minds, for example. What they do is try to arrive at conceptual refinements through arguments against intuitions, and explore the limits of human knowledge. But they still tackle with these metaphysical and epistemological problems, and, for me, they can at times provoke great angst. So, aside from sheer arrogance about one's one views, how does one in the philosophy department--and especially an undergrad without the great background knowledge of counter-arguments that professors have--learn to be confident in their own views, and avoid letting anxiety run amok?

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