I believe that it is better to tell the truth than a lie.I believe it is better to be free than to be a slave.And I believe it is better to know than to be ignorant.- H.L. Mencken Believe in yourself, and trust your own wisdomrather than being swayed by the opinions of others...
Believing is a routine, reasonable activity The ethnomethodological flip redirects attention from hypothetical things-in-the-head to observable activities. That suggests studying occasions of doing believing, rather than static beliefs.3 Believing shares the characteristics of other routine, reasonable activi...
but never got any further than the street. But we had fun with it, and I wanted to sing with them, but I was a girl so there was no way. I mean, my mother would make them take me with them whenever they went out to play, and that was enough. [But the expectation ...
But the truth is that your endless optimism is a giant lie. You’re lying to a part of yourself, ignoring the needs of half of who you are. Because we all have a dark side; we all hold anguish, hatred, and pain. Ignoring these realities eats us up, and forces us to cave-in spi...
While subconsciously I think we know “it needs to be perfect” is a lie, how many times do we stop ourselves while writing because something isn't working right? It’s clunky. We can’t find the right words. So we stop instead of pushing through and finishing it. ...
This lie that we can be anything we want as long as we really believe is rooted in postmodernism, which is a worldview that is based on the premise that there is no absolute truth. A postmodernist would say, “What is true for you may not be true for me, but as long as we are ...
” Moral relativists believe cultures and people groups create their moral codes rather than discover them. Moral codes are a social construct designed by the majority to help the group maintain social harmony and increase their ability to survive. But if cultural agreement determines moral truth, ...
If you are getting started with Linux or have been using it for a while, there is a pretty good chance that you have stumbled upon some GNU Linux myths.
LIFE'S BIGGEST QUESTIONSare leading me through a narrow street in a stately Houston neighborhood, where haunting piles of home furnishings-cabinets, carpet, curtains-lie on the north side of the street in mud-streaked abandon. Meanwhile, the south side, unharmed by the torrential rain, looks a...