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Saturday, 1 November 2014

Arts & Humanities: Philosophy: “Question: Can peoples who born deaf hear??” plus 5 more

Arts & Humanities: Philosophy: “Question: Can peoples who born deaf hear??” plus 5 more


Question: Can peoples who born deaf hear??

Posted: 01 Nov 2014 09:13 AM PDT

Remember, if they are born deaf or become deaf later in life, they're still deaf, right? So no, they can't hear at all.

Have a great day and I wish my answer helped.

Question: Agree or disagree: We live in a beautiful wolrd full of ugly people?

Posted: 01 Nov 2014 08:46 AM PDT

Actually, I would disagree, because if you hang out with the right people, and stay away from the wrong people, like deleting them from your life, then your life will be a better life. So no, I would disagree, because only few people are evil, not all of them. Plus, if you are nice with anyone, I'm pretty sure many people will be nice people. But in the same time, I agree that the world if full of ugly people, but not all of them are ugly, that's what I'm talking about.

Have a great day and I wish my answer helped.

Question: I just do not get one thing: if I had a good reason/intent and I made a bad impact why people always see the impact as a bad impact although?

Posted: 01 Nov 2014 08:36 AM PDT

It depends of course. One can be entirely fooled that what they are doing is in good cause, similar to a Hitler character, but the effect is obviously evil. This is to not to say, however, that intent does not matter. This is due to the fact that men do not understand the absolute nature of what is moral and what is not. The process of morality is an interpersonal one, and so what one says to themselves about the world dictates what is moral about the world. But even this is limited, for there is disagreement, and so there is some sense that each person feels there is an actual morality existing in absolutism that perhaps extends beyond even themselves. The matter of morality is very difficult, as you can see. We come to morality through an interpersonal understanding, and so our judgement of others must be restrained. At the same time, we must not ignore the call to do what we feel is right if we are to be considered moral people. All this amounts to the fact that morality itself is constrained to an ability beyond mankind, and so our own ability is as well. There is no way we could possibly be judged morally based on our own ability. Now we must turn from this, and search for another ability beyond mankind. I'll leave that conclusion to you.

Question: Can most of your problems be relieved or solved with more money?

Posted: 01 Nov 2014 08:16 AM PDT

Anything related to work causing stress or negatively affecting your life - if you had enough money you would never have to work.

Anything related to health issues - if you had enough money you wouldn't have to work and could focus on receiving the best healthcare available.

Anything related to socialization and relationship issues - if you had enough money you could get every material good and service to help make you more like-able, even relationship coaching and therapy.

When you think about it, having more money can help solve most any problem.

Question: What this means in short? If one can really come to that state of saying"I do not know," it indicates an extraordinary sense of humility?

Posted: 01 Nov 2014 08:13 AM PDT

what this means in short? If one can really come to that state of saying"I do not know," it indicates an extraordinary sense of humility?

If one can really come to that state of saying, "I do not know," it indicates an extraordinary sense of humility; there is no arrogance of knowledge; there is no self-assertive answer to make an impression. When you can actually say, "I do not know," which very few are capable of saying, then in that state all fear ceases because all sense of recognition, the search into memory, has come to an end; there is no longer inquiry into the field of the known. Then comes the extraordinary thing. If you have so far followed what I am talking about, not just verbally, but if you are actually experiencing it, you will find that when you can say, "I do not know," all conditioning has stopped. And what then is the state of the mind? ...
We are seeking something permanent – permanent in the sense of time, something enduring, everlasting. We see that everything about us is transient, in flux, being born, withering, and dying, and our search is. But that which is truly sacred is beyond the measure of time; it is not to be found within the field of the known.

Question: Is God going to judge on just one day or continually judge over a period of time?

Posted: 01 Nov 2014 08:05 AM PDT

Depends on your theology; different people believe different things. Theology boils down to 100% speculation anyways. Funny how god has never bothered to clarify which of the thousands of interpretations of thousands of religious texts is the correct one. It's almost as if he didn't actually exist or something. Believe whatever you want, so long as your beliefs have no negative impacts on others. If there is a god or gods, clarifying theology is clearly not one of his/her/its/their priorities.

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