Friday, February 15, 2008

Filtering - Privacy Matters



MySpace - Gamespot - Flickr - "Evolution..."-Blog
For known (z.B. Boss/Chef) & all other People (My Philosophies - Allgemein)


Facebook - StudiVz - "Nsae Comp's personal Blog"/Friends-Blog
For Friends Eyes only?


StudiVz Gruppe "Ich glaube an und halte zu den Menschen die ich liebe!(?)" - "My Blog about my first Ex-Relationship Phase."-Blog
Personenspzifische - Intime Themen ("A Tribute to Peace, to (my) Love")


Private Texte (Zettel/Hard Disk Texte/Tagebuch/Blog Einträge, die herausgenommen wurden)
Veraltete, nicht mehr haltbare Theorien & Statements (November '07 - u.a. Exzerpte "DANKE ALEX, Tschüss mit MIR")
Unvollkommene, unübelegte, verletzende, veraltete, nicht mehr haltbare & nicht mehr zustimmende Theorien & Statements (November '07 - u.a. Exzerpte "DANKE ALEX, Tschüss mit MIR")



About credibility?

Exzerpt aus einer Frage an OSHO:

"Why do you contradict yourself?"

(mehr zu diesem Thema hier)

[...]

You say: I know that you love contradictions.

It is not so that I love contradictions. What can I do? Contradictions are there! If I have to be true to the totality of existence I have to love them, otherwise something will have to be denied. And the moment you deny something you miss something immensely valuable, and the denial will never allow you to know the whole. And only the whole is true; the parts are only parts. They have some meaning only in the context of the whole; in themselves they are meaningless.

That's why science has created great meaninglessness in the world. It was bound to happen; it is a by-product of scientific methodology. Science tries to explain everything cleanly, with no vagueness; it wants to reduce everything to clear-cut categories. And it has succeeded, but in its success man and his spirit has failed.

The success of science is rooted in Aristotle, but man's failure -- the failure of his joy, the failure of his love, the failure of his capacity to sing, dance and celebrate -- is also rooted in Aristotle. But there are clear-cut signs of revolt, particularly within these last thirty, forty years -- many great scientists have revolted against Aristotle. The first one to revolt was Albert Einstein.

[...]





Thanks to two special Friends, who rose my awarenes about this topic.
Do the Filter

No comments: