Hey!
Have you ever made a choice that you could, honest to goodness, say was completely right from every point of view? Really? The fact of the matter is, in this day of age, there's more black and gray than there is white. Humans are too imperfect.
There's choices you've made that are completely wrong, completely bad, and there are choices you've made that were good for the majority. But that's a shade of gray. Pristine white is just plain impossible for an imperfect human being to achieve on its own.
Luv ya,
Tashi :)
2007-12-15 07:37:52
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answer #1
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answered by LilLaTLuv 4
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Gray, perception leads to shades of gray. Since no two people are identical in anyway, whether its in looks, experiences, life circumstances, and so on no two people have the same perception on a situation therfore the answer to somethig is varied.
i.e. Murder...a person who is against this will not kill in any circumstance, we'll call this "white"
A person can kill for pleasure we'll call this "black"
Then there is a war people who don't belive in murder go to war, some feel it is wrong some feel it is right we'll call this "gray"
It depends on your perception of the situation, if you were taught all murder is wrong then its a black and white wheather you do it or not, if you were taught its wrong, and also taught to support your country then its a gray area.
I'm not saying any of the above are right or wrong just using that as an example of how nothing is black and white unless you percieve it to be that way
2007-12-15 07:30:19
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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It would not easily make something black and white, all colorings can nevertheless be seen as they're. it seems this form as a results of fact considering the fact that moon is reflecting the sunlight onto the earth, it is not direct gentle. as a results of fact it is basically a mirrored image, it is not as sturdy as direct gentle. subsequently, each and all the colours seem much less surprising. you're able to do an test to coach this: take a flashlight and bypass in a room with little or no gentle. Shine the flashlight on in basic terms a splash fabric or some thing that's brightly colored. this could be like daylight hours. Now in case you're taking a surprising e book or some thing that ought to mirror the flashlight's gentle ( not a reflect, as a results of fact it truly is virtually direct gentle), shine the flashlight onto the surprising floor, and solid the mirrored image onto that comparable piece of fabric, you will notice that the colour seems extra boring than it substitute into in the previous. Sorry this substitute into long, yet i wish that spoke back your question! :)
2016-12-11 05:46:07
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Nope, its all shades of grey. (or perhaps 'gray') In fact we can't even agree on how to spell 'grey' nevermind more complicated questions.
'Shades of grey' means that there is no absolute knowledge. For example, while Newtonian physics is very useful stuff, its technically not absolutely true. (you actually can convert energy to matter and vice versa, Einstein proved it with relativity)
This is important because up to that point, people, the world's most intelligent people, thought that Newtonian physics were absollutely true. (black and white)
So too does quantum physics put into question lots of things that we thought were more or less 'true'.
And if physics, a so-called 'hard' science can have little room for black and white, where does that leave us in the less objective areas of inquiry.
2007-12-15 07:36:08
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answer #4
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answered by megalomaniac 7
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With the concept of black and white one is essentially ascribing to the perspective of negative and positive or good and bad. I would emphasize that the circular nature of existance negates such vantages. If I have all that I will ever need than there are those who do not have it. If my station is as low as it can possibly be than it must inevitably get better. Good luck and God Bless.
2007-12-15 07:24:53
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answer #5
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answered by Pee Amigo No 3 5
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Our physics tells us that "black" is the absence of all color and "white" is the presence of all color; so, in a sense, black and white do not even exist.
2007-12-15 07:37:19
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answer #6
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answered by d2 7
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