Well, being a teacher I can definitely say, that sometimes education can be a catastrophe, and catastrophe can educate, too.
2007-02-19 01:23:26
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answer #1
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answered by ? 2
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The World is like an infinite media broadcasting station. We are like radios or television set that tune in to whatever we choose. Any perspective is available, from downright catastrophe to "the peace that surpasses all understanding" or anywhere in between.
Just for an experiment, take one week, do not listen to the news. Read a book that you enjoy, watch television programs that make you feel good. Call someone you enjoy talking to. Do things that make you feel good, after all it is only for a week. Put effort into noticing good things, thank everyone that helps you. Every thought that comes into your head that disturbs you, put on the back burner, so to speak until the week is up.
At the end of that week ask the question and then answer it yourself," What is the real world"?
2007-02-19 12:08:46
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answer #2
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answered by stedyedy 5
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It is definately a "race" to find the next best and enduring ideology/philosophy called Darwinism.
And its not even easy to explain the history of this; even in our
western civilisation,Darwin came along relatively late-and also
probably intimately connected with this ideology is the fact that
only lately has mass education been the norm(in the west only
i may add).
And i think that day-by-day and year-by-year, the notion that the best should be striven-for,that it always is the
"good"; Is becoming interconnected closely with the now popular
notion of the rightness, of mass education- especially advanced
mass education.
All this may be leading into a larger populated
and fractious world; but there is plenty to be hopeful of and for-
(its living good peoples and their individuals; good merciful faiths;
our technology; and our beautiful planet,with its lovely plants and
animals too; all reasons to live with hope and joy,and thus to try
and try again to help one another, especially to live side-by-side
in peace).
2007-02-19 09:46:49
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answer #3
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answered by peter m 6
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I don't think we need to take such a pessimistic view of life. I'd rather look at the glass as half-full. Look at the giant strides man has made, the resilience the human kind has shown. Somehow, even if there is a catastrophe, the human species will know how get out of it.
2007-02-19 11:19:30
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answer #4
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answered by Traveller 5
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no the world will never be destroyed.and who cares if it . fear no evil.
2007-02-19 10:39:23
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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