“When my information changes, I alter my conclusions. What do you do, sir?”
― John Maynard Keynes
― John Maynard Keynes
“When my information changes, I alter my conclusions. What do you do, sir?”
― John Maynard Keynes
"Sometimes its not a lie, the truth just changes"I like it.This is the essence of any honest person, whether he/she be a scientist or otherwise.
Some people never change their mind about anything at all, and think this makes them "assertive". It doesn't. It just makes them look stubborn in the face of new evidence.
"The speculative nature of scientific thought was brought home to the Dalai Lama most clearly through hearing about the work of Thomas Kuhn, who wrote about how paradigms shift in science. . . . From this, the Dalai Lama saw, we must take scientific truths not as absolute and unchanging, but as theories that can become outdated if they do not fit new facts. . . . The self-correcting process through which science continues to sharpen in pursuit of truth parallels the very spirit of Buddhist logic in which the Dalai Lama is steeped. 'In a way, the methodologies of Buddhist thought and science are essentially similar.' "“When my information changes, I alter my conclusions. What do you do, sir?”
― John Maynard Keynes
The US writer and artist Lee Escobedo wrote in the Guardian earlier this year: “Skibidi brainrot encapsulates a generation fluent in irony but starved for meaning. This kind of hyper-chaotic media serves as both entertainment and an ambient worldview for young men raised online. Their minds normalise prank-as-expression.”
Skibidi brainrot encapsulates a generation fluent in irony but starved for meaning. This kind of hyper-chaotic media serves as both entertainment and an ambient worldview for young men raised online. Their minds normalise prank-as-expression.”
Agreed. The sad thing is that many people would be perfectly happy to let others do their thinking for them. Hence the popularity of Fox News.I think I would change this to - "If people cannot read well, they cannot think well..."
And various social networks (which I will not name for fear of our Mighty Moderators).Agreed. The sad thing is that many people would be perfectly happy to let others do their thinking for them. Hence the popularity of Fox News.
This reminds me of something Groucho Marx once said: "Television is a very educational tool. When anyone turns it on, I go to the other room and read a book."I would add something that Mark Twain said: "The man who doesn't read good books has no advantage over the man who can't read them."
This reminds me of something Groucho Marx once said: "Television is a very educational tool. When anyone turns it on, I go to the other room and read a book."
A great man, by all accounts. I have Meditations on my to-read list, made a small start on it. He's not the most interesting emperor, but that might just be because I don't know him yet; but he makes a good case for most admirable one.
Another good one to get familiar with is Epictetus. A book by Sharon Lebell offers a nice little manual about his teachings:
Art of Living: Epictetus's Timeless Wisdom on Virtue, Happiness, and Tranquility for a Fulfilling and Ethical Life
That book brought me a lot of comfort in a trying time.