Dec 09, 2009 17:03
How many times things fall to the ground and you start fighting with the doer of that fall? Have you ever said, no its not your fault its the gravity that has pulled that thing? You or anyone else have never said that. Why? Because we are very fast to reach the decisions of our own mind. And, the same is done by the billions-trillions of people from trillions of years. So, what's the difference?
Yes, there is a definite difference. I like to give example of Isaac Newton, a school quitter who was told by teachers that he can never learn maths, saw an apple was broken from tree and fell the ground. Humanity has seen this scenario for millions or trillions of years and the answer is Yes, things fall to ground. But, with all the answers from ancients, Newton starts thinking, why the apple fell down?
Looks like he initially want to satisfy his own self, but the discovery led him to the Royal Society.
This is what I said in my last post that we think everything from our past that consists of what our forefathers said. Also, what we read becomes our belief. If we don't have that thinker who are always thrilled to see things from beginning no one has challenged the theories of Newton.
So, to think, we need to reconsider everything.
First, we need to learn the things as they are, then we gradually need to increase this knowledge by reading more. We then need to reconsider this.
learning