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The single most important lesson of all time...

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The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby arocoun » Wed 30 Nov 2005, 14:04:39

I've been giving this a lot of thought. From everything I know of history, philosophy, psychology, etc., I think that the following is very relevant.

I believe that, more important than any scientific or technological discovery, more important than any literature, more important than any philosophy, and even more important than the lesson that we live on a finite planet; the single most important lesson that should be passed from generation to generation is that humans are very prone to self-deception, and that all ideas should be challenged.

If you look at history, you find a great multitude of cases where people believed crazy, impossible, terrible, or simply moronic things, only because that was the big belief of the time. And more importantly, they refused to believe otherwise, because they had so thoroughly convinced themselves that what they believed was true. Only when people began to question their beliefs, like the philosophers of ancient Greece or the thinkers of the Renaissance, was any progress made against the false beliefs of earlier times.

Some of history's more terrible self-deceptions were that:
--there are gods living in the sky that want their followers to conquer and oppress those around them
--that the king is a living god
--that women are physically and mentally incapable of anything but having and taking care of as many babies as possible
--that cleanliness is bad for you
--that you had to give your time, money, and freedom to the Catholic church, or their loving god would torture you for all eternity
--that prayer to YHWH, the evil god of obedience, draconian punishment, and imperialism, will make your plague problems go away
--that people should follow their lot in life because that's the way the god(s) want things to be (that nobles should be nobles because they were born as nobles, that peasants should be peasants, that slaves should be slaves, etc.)
--that disease has something to do with humours
--that certain groups (most recently, the "negros") are naturally born to be slaves
--that working more than 50 hours a week is natural or acceptable
--that human sacrifices are necessary for anything
--that drug-induced hallucinations are messages from god/the soul
--that animals can't feel anything, so it's okay to cut them open, alive and without anesthetic (well this is almost as much "current events" as "history")
--that we are the superior race, and can thus exterminate all others
--that technology can break the laws of thermodynamics
--that market forces can do anything
--I could go on and on.

The simple truth is that only those who know they can decieve themselves have to power to see through the deceptions of themselves or others. And, I believe that knowing this lesson is absolutely essential to retaining any of the progress we've achieved throughout history, and creating any sane society in the future.

Any thoughts?
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--The barbarians are not Greek.
--Therefore, we must conquer, exploit, and kill the barbarians.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby AmericanEmpire » Wed 30 Nov 2005, 14:43:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-that women are physically and mentally incapable of anything but having and taking care of as many babies as possible


You mean that ones not true? :lol:
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby ashurbanipal » Wed 30 Nov 2005, 19:26:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') believe that, more important than any scientific or technological discovery, more important than any literature, more important than any philosophy, and even more important than the lesson that we live on a finite planet; the single most important lesson that should be passed from generation to generation is that humans are very prone to self-deception, and that all ideas should be challenged.


Presumably including this one. Should all ideas be challenged? Maybe that's not as good an idea as you think. If I decide to challenge the notion that every member of the species homo sapiens cannot survive long without oxygen, and put it to empirical testing, I could do a lot of damage indeed. If I decide to challenge the idea that 2+2=4 while maintaining the generally accepted framework of mathematics (i.e. I'm challenging the idea that 2+2=4 is a correctly performed calculation, without challenging what the elements of the calculation mean), I'd probably engage in considerable and futile gyrations. By questioning a previously held idea, I may convince myself of something equally bad. And how would I know?

A fellow named Ernst Cassirer explains this in much greater detail in a little book called "Language and Myth," which I recommend.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you look at history, you find a great multitude of cases where people believed crazy, impossible, terrible, or simply moronic things, only because that was the big belief of the time.


And yet, in the list you cite, you seem to exempt many of our "big beliefs" as being not crazy, impossible, terrible, or moronic. Don't get me wrong, I'm not anti-science (quite the contrary), but I just get mental goosebumps when people start ascribing the sort of infallibility to it that people used to ascribe oracles, all in the name of dispelling myth.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd more importantly, they refused to believe otherwise, because they had so thoroughly convinced themselves that what they believed was true. Only when people began to question their beliefs, like the philosophers of ancient Greece or the thinkers of the Renaissance, was any progress made against the false beliefs of earlier times.


Eventually, we get a paradox out of this. If we're so good at convincing ourselves of false beliefs, and we refuse to believe even in the face of superior argumentation, then we have to admit we may be victims of that self deception in any of our ideas, bar none. Very quickly ends up worse than solipsism, if that's conceivable.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ome of history's more terrible self-deceptions were that:


My comments follow a few of these in bold:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-there are gods living in the sky that want their followers to conquer and oppress those around them


Can you prove there weren't/ aren't? Can you provide the least possible reason to think that, by not believing this, we're not in the grip of powerful self-deception?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-that the king is a living god


The king may well be a living god.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-that women are physically and mentally incapable of anything but having and taking care of as many babies as possible


This is no exception I'm afraid (I wish it weren't, because I'm convinced otherwise). How do we know that when we observe women doing things on a par with men, they aren't temporarily possessed by some spirit that makes them competent? How do we know they aren't robots? These may seem like strange questions (especially if you're a woman), but the point has nothing to do with the plausiblity of any of the creative alternatives in this vein we might posit. The point has to do with how we can exclude them with certainty. We can't. We can't for men, either, for that matter, but that's a different proposition than the one being examined.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-that cleanliness is bad for you

Bad how? Bathing in the Middle ages might well have been worse than the alternative. This is something that is seldom considered these days...

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-that you had to give your time, money, and freedom to the Catholic church, or their loving god would torture you for all eternity

And there may be millions upon millions of souls being tortured in some extra-dimensional pit of fire right this moment and for all eternity because they didn't give enough time, money, or freedom. Again, don't get me wrong, I'm no adherent to catholicism. But by making the kind of absolute statement you have, I'm motivated to ask how you're so certain that this is a bad idea, held by morons who had convinced themselves against all reason and sense?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-that disease has something to do with humours

This one sparks a slightly different discussion. 'Humors' may be a term for what we now understand to be composed of a variety of entities, but that doesn't mean it's an idiotic idea.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-')-that drug-induced hallucinations are messages from god/the soul

The notion that they aren't is motivated by one of the biggest ideas of the day--physicalism. By your stated principle, we should be questioning this very idea. Ergo, it's possible that such hallucinations are messages from god/ the soul.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he simple truth is that only those who know they can decieve themselves have to power to see through the deceptions of themselves or others. And, I believe that knowing this lesson is absolutely essential to retaining any of the progress we've achieved throughout history, and creating any sane society in the future.

Right you are, so long as it's understood that "progress," "sane," "achievment," etc. are all human terms. An alien being, with no concept whatever of what it's like to be human, might not allow that we'd made any "progress" since ancient times, but had instead only traded terms around. An ancient person, committed to the worship of a God, would say that we had gone so far backwards as to no longer be human, but animal. And there may be a certain kind of truth to this idea.

I guess my criticism here is that you seem to establish a principle, and then fail to follow it in the list of bad beliefs you posted. I wonder if it's not more fair to say that it's not that people can convince themselves that a belief is good even when it's not, only that they fail to balance creativity and sense in their questioning.

For instance, you mention the ancient Greeks and the Rennaisance philosophers, implying that they questioned more, or perhaps better, than philosophers from other places and times. But they questioned by a rough set of common principles. Others (such as the medieval scholastics) questioned by different principles. If the field is always open to question (as it is), then we can make no value judgements between those sets of principles, and Augustine is just as good as Archimedes. Trying to force a different conclusion is prejudice.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby eastbay » Wed 30 Nov 2005, 19:51:23

I find it interesting that we can often see our strangest beliefs reflected in our largest structures, monuments and memorials.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby arocoun » Wed 30 Nov 2005, 20:49:48

AmericanEmpire--You will die by the hands of a hoard of angry women...soon.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kochevnik', 'p')eople can delude themselves about ANYTHING. And what was most enlightening, is that I could include myself in that group as well. The number of scientific experiments proving this idea was mind-boggling. I think it is truly a bedrock idea you have there.


Thanks.

ashurbanipal--Yeah, funny. I advise people to question their beliefs, but not to the point of absurdity. It's the difference between 1) believing something because you believe it, 2) believing something because you've tested it reasonably and know it to be true, and 3) not believing anything because you can never be exactly 100% sure of anything. Of the choices, the second one is the one I advocate.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')on't get me wrong, I'm not anti-science (quite the contrary), but I just get mental goosebumps when people start ascribing the sort of infallibility to it that people used to ascribe oracles, all in the name of dispelling myth.


Go ahead--question science if you want. If you believe that science does things wrong, and you have a more reliable way to describe and learn about reality, go ahead and use it. I myself rely as much on simple observation and interaction as I do science for my beliefs.

eastbay--Agreed.
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--We are Greek.
--The barbarians are not Greek.
--Therefore, we must conquer, exploit, and kill the barbarians.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby arocoun » Wed 30 Nov 2005, 20:56:56

Additionally, I didn't say there weren't gods, or a Catholic god, or whatever. What I said was that they were terrible, unsupportable beliefs that lead to oppression and war. It isn't so much the truth of whether or not they existed that I contend with, as much as it is the fact that they were blindly believed in.

Oh, and when I mentioned the ancient Greek and Rennaisance thinkers I was referring more to revolutions in thought than the thinkers themselves. I mentioned them in particular because they were the most stand-out examples of change in western thought.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby ashurbanipal » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 00:04:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'a')shurbanipal--Yeah, funny.


It is a little funny.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') advise people to question their beliefs, but not to the point of absurdity.


It used to be absurd to question everything but the Bible. Prior to that, it was absurd to question everything except the edicts of Caesar. Prior to that...OK, I think you get my drift. You have to be rigorous about what counts as absurd. In thinking about stuff like this, maybe nothing is absurd.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t's the difference between 1) believing something because you believe it


Look, this may seem like pointless bickering to you (I hope not), but no one believes something because they believe it. There are generally independent causes for all beliefs. The belief doesn't cause itself. If that's not what you meant, what did you mean?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '2')) believing something because you've tested it reasonably and know it to be true,


Tested, and gotten results, by whose reasoning? Your own? Shouldn't you be questioning it, just now?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'n')ot believing anything because you can never be exactly 100% sure of anything.

There's an obvious difference between believing and not believing something. But I think you may have meant that there's a difference between being skeptical of everything, and skeptical of things that have yet to be established, or that were established poorly. And that was my whole point. The problem is, you don't seem to apply that idea in an unprejudiced manner.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')o ahead--question science if you want.

I'll be in great company, principally in the company of the best scientists the world has produced if I do so. Galileo, Newton, Planck, Einstein, Lobachevsky, Hilbert, Liebniz, Descartes, Everett, Bell, Minkowski, Godel (well, technically some of these are mathematicians), etc. all made their mark by questioning the conclusions of scientists prior to or at least contemporary with themselves. In fact, I don't think the debate between Newton and Liebniz about substantival space has ever been settled. The two men died, and no one else understood what they were on about.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you believe that science does things wrong, and you have a more reliable way to describe and learn about reality, go ahead and use it.

Science gets plenty wrong. As for reliability:

1) That's another questionable principle (why should reliability and truth be related?), but leaving that aside:
2) Even science doesn't seem to explain everything--more to the point, there are some by-now well known problems that it doesn't look like science can provide an answer for in principle. The ultimate origin of reality (I hesitate to use the term 'universe') is a pretty good example. The final cause of consciousness is begining to look like another, but we'll have to wait and see.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')dditionally, I didn't say there weren't gods, or a Catholic god, or whatever.

OK.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hat I said was that they were terrible, unsupportable beliefs that lead to oppression and war.

And this, I lament with you. I think you have me somewhat wrong, here. I am not arguing that belief in, say, Jesus, should so inspire someone that they should feel justified in killing another person. Frankly, if it weren't so serious, it would be almost comical for someone to yell out "I kill you in the name of Jesus!" I would hope, in fact, that faced with the emotional horror of such an act, people would be more willing to question and refrain from the use of ordinance, as you have suggested. Ethically, there ought to be lots of questions.

But this isn't the point. We today are in the grips of a philosophy every bit as myth-bound as prior philosophies. We can't help it. Every aspect of modern life is filled with it, and it fills us as well. If you want to question, I applaud you. But if you're only going to question things that are commonly not held to be true any longer, as per your list, I would ask why. That seems like the easy way. Why not encourage questioning of the popular mythos of today, if questioning has got you so on fire?

Look, there's way more material that serves as backdrop to this discussion than I could ever hope to relay. Try checking out indeterminism (aka The Quine-Duhem Thesis or the Quine-Duhem superproblem) if you want to see an example of how people are questioning now.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t isn't so much the truth of whether or not they existed that I contend with, as much as it is the fact that they were blindly believed in.

Here, I agree. I think the originators of every religion ever known have been completely misunderstood. Their followers sought them, when instead those followers should have been seeking what their masters had sought.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')h, and when I mentioned the ancient Greek and Rennaisance thinkers I was referring more to revolutions in thought than the thinkers themselves. I mentioned them in particular because they were the most stand-out examples of change in western thought.

I don't know that they're the most stand-out. They're thought of that way today because they form the basis of the precursors for modern thought. The ancient Greeks were pretty smart; it's practically impossible to think about something they didn't think about (this is rather humbling, actually). But in terms of how the various aspects of human existence were treated, the most radical changes in thought probably occured throughout the world during the axial age, and then again at the begining of the 20th century in Europe and North America.

You might be surprised at how little a departure the Rennaissance thinkers took from the Scholastics. It seemed big at the time, but just as one counter example, we still refer to Occam's razor as a guiding principle of science, though William of Occam died in the 14th century (1350, IIRC). A more subtle example is that we still accept Aquinas' notion of properties as being not distinct from the objects that carry them--we'd never have found the germ theory of disease without the notion that disease was instantiated in carrier objects. Nor would we ever have understood plate techtonics.

Anyway, I'm not trying to show off. My point is that your post seemed to be saying that we should question everything, and then, look, here are all the stupid things that people believed before, when that list was based on a quite biased read of the history of thought. The Greek revolution in thought, the Renaissance revolution in thought, etc. were less revolutions and more the crowned proclamations of prior schools of thought, all of which still have quite a lot to teach us. If Ryle eschewed Husserl, if Newton eschewed Spinoza, if Dennet eschews Libet and Chalmers, we ought to ask why.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby arocoun » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 01:16:25

Well, it seems I'm not as knowledgable about history as you are. It seems that thought from the ages I mentioned was often a restatement and refinement of earlier thought.

I think I now understand what points you're trying to make. For example, you point out the fallacy of putting religious faith in science. That, I actually agree with--science is a tool for gaining knowledge, but it is not perfect or godlike. Indeed, on some topics, like those of animal intelligence or spirituality, I believe that science lags way behind other methods of obtaining knowledge, because science is so mechanical, detached, and interest-based.

I think you may believe that I don't question today's beliefs because I didn't include them on my list. However, in my list I tried to point out the more terrible beliefs of history--the past. I myself am a radical thinker of the present, and I tend to disagree with many of the presumptions of the present, too. For one big example, I have questioned, and now oppose, the idea of civilization itself.

On the topic of absurdity, I believe absurdity should be judged on a subjective basis. But I gave more thought to the examples you gave me which I called "absurd" earlier, and have come to the conclusion that they aren't all that absurd after all. For all I know, all women could be robots or aliens, as small a chance as that might be--and thus, in addition to questioning the assumption that they can't do anything but be mothers, I should also question any conclusion I come to from questioning that belief.

...okay, I'll take a moment to untie my brain from this knot I made here...

As for believing something because they believe it, what I meant was giving one's beliefs emotional so much emotional or intrinsic value that they refuse to question their belief. I definitely don't think beliefs make themselves. Yeah, I should have specified, but I wanted to make a short and sweet point.

On the topic of questioning my own reasoning: Yeah, I actually have long since asked myself, "can I trust my own reasoning?" My conclusion was that my own reasoning is the only reasoning I have in the end, so I might as well use it. If my reasoning isn't trustworthy, I'll never know it. My only other option is to not reason at all, and thus be no more thoughtful than a plant. But plants are boring.

But yeah, to make it clear, I don't just question the assumptions of the past, like those on my list. I question many things that the people around me hold as unquestionable reality. Which is, of course, why I made this topic to begin with. I believe we still have a lot of stuff to question, which is why it's important to pass on the knowledge that we should question our beliefs.
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--The barbarians are not Greek.
--Therefore, we must conquer, exploit, and kill the barbarians.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby threadbear » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 01:53:11

Arocoun--Plants are boring? There you go again! :lol:
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby seldom_seen » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 02:25:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('arocoun', 'W')hat I said was that they were terrible, unsupportable beliefs that lead to oppression and war. It isn't so much the truth of whether or not they existed that I contend with, as much as it is the fact that they were blindly believed in.

Are these beliefs that lead to warfare the ends or the means?

Humans certainly have lots beliefs and philosophies, however we are also a primate and a mammal with deep rooted biological urges for survival, protection of territory, procreation...

Our closest living primate relative, the chimpanzee, is also known for waging war on its own kind. As far as we know they are not doing this under the banner of religion or racism or patriotism. Why are they doing it then? and why are we doing it?

In the spirit of challenging our own self deception, I think that we will always be living in a deluded state if we believe that all our actions, good or bad are simply a result of what we think or believe. Somewhere beneath our "thinking brain" there is a much older and more primitive part of our species that I don't think we have come to terms with, nor realize the full influence that it has on our actions and behavior.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby Raxozanne » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 04:42:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seldom_seen', '
')Our closest living primate relative, the chimpanzee, is also known for waging war on its own kind. As far as we know they are not doing this under the banner of religion or racism or patriotism. Why are they doing it then? and why are we doing it?


Chimpanzees evolved to wage war because it made reproductive sense to do so. They don't so much 'wage war' as go on a raid and beat up (and usually mortally injure) a solitary male of the neighbouring party. If you can beat the hell out of a solitary male stranger chimp without risking much and perhaps bag yourself a female of breeding age in the process then why not? So the chimps do it.

Humans who don't adhere to human rights or do not have state law do the same-the most basic example is the infamous yanomamo people who go on raids for women and prestige. If given the chance they enjoy bashing the brains out of rival clan babies and sticking the children full of arrows. The male mortality rate is someting like 30% in these circumstances - like male chimp mortality rates.

Religion can be used by smart leaders as the glue to hold masses of people together so that they can go and beat the hell out of another mass of people over the way and gain: women, resources and territory. It also helps to define 'us' and 'them' and makes 'them' look like barbarians thus helping to do away with problems of morals.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby Battle_Scarred_Galactico » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 07:36:59

Or in other words, it's all the reasons that people make up as to why THEY are BETTER than someone else.

You are never going to change this, ever, as everyone wants to be the best. And those who don't usually end up getting trampled all over, as evident through centuries of history.

I believe we're going to see more of the same as everything unfolds, this is a good thead though as you've raised a good issue.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby arocoun » Thu 01 Dec 2005, 13:47:53

I don't think it's fully natural nor inevitable for humans to be warlike brutes. Most certainly, individuals (from most mammalian species, at least) can have traits different from those of the species in general. Even IF humans in general are selfish and destructive by nature, individual humans don't HAVE to be.

But I would even argue that humanity in general doesn't have to be like that. Even the bonobo, not much evolved from the chimp, has a generally egalitarian, peaceful way of existing. Humans have evolved even farther away from chimps than that, and thus aren't necessarily bound to the hierarchal, patriachal, and occassionally brutish way of the chimp.

History shows plenty of examples of groups of humans warring over land, resources, slaves, and religion. But history also has plenty of examples of humans betraying their group or country to oppose such things, or groups of humans simply existing in relative peace. In the past, most such groups were conquered by imperialist forces because they were less practiced in fighting and had less technology for war, but this lesson has been learned for the future by many who would re-create peaceful societies.

As for Raxozanne's pointing out that humans have to be bound by human rights or laws to restrain selfish, destructive behavior, I believe that to be false, both on the individual and general level--as do many others. Anarchist literature, for example, is filled with examples of cooperation and altruism being done by free people. And primitivists both believe in and have examples of people being able to exist in relative peace and cooperation without the bounds of civilization, law, or complex concepts (like rights). Of course, not all humans have the ability to do this, but I definitely believe that a large portion of humanity is capable of it, given the right conditions.

I don't have a lot of faith in humanity, and I'm not saying humans will stop creating excuses for brutish imperialism in the future. But I do believe they can, and I do believe at at least a few will.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby oowolf » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 17:53:15

A philosopher, I can't remember which one, (Kierkegaard or maybe Piaget?) once drew a connection between the human child's development of self consciousness and the ability to tell a lie in order to defend that "posited self". Once one gets good at deceiving others, the next step is often self deception. Social leaders (politicians) are very prone to self deception as politics is mostly the art of lying to gain social status.

Most of the people I encounter in current Amerika are so hypnotized by the advertising industry they wouldn't know an axiomatic truth unless there was a movie coming out about it.
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Re: The single most important lesson of all time...

Unread postby Pops » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 21:39:11

The single most important lesson of all time...

Has nothing to do with talking.


"Can't never did anything."

That means doing.


Quit talking...

Start doing.
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