Imaginations the doorway to Inner Peace

Chapter 2 - A trip to the past...

Phantomz2022/01/21 20:54
Follow

Before we study the future as well as what it holds for us, it would be of great importance to cross examine the events of the past.

As seen through out the history of the human race, the sole drive of all event that has transpired has always been associated with the the imaginations; An undying urge to satisfy the hunger and desire which are constantly as well as consistently been generated by our imaginations, as it seems to gamble between what is actually right and what is wrong.

Whenever you are presented with the choices "right" or "wrong" your mind is immediately faced with a pressing dilemma. Let's say for example you're given the opportunity to either choose between eating a poultry bird in its egg state, or wait for some time after which it would mature before you can proceed with eating that same poultry bird. Your decisions are most likely to be affected, depending on what type of thought processes you've consistently been engaging.

So how those this relate to wars, violence as well those events which had happened in the past you may ask, wars and conflicts are just part of the option of choice which after forgone would yield its outcome of violence and lots of bad things. So why do people still choose wars and conflict instead of peace, why do they still choose to steal, kill and destroy things instead of working together to get the things which are considered as right.

This would infact lead us to a controversial stand point of view which begs the question "is there really neither right nor wrong, true nor false, or is all of this just a figment of our imaginations, just something used in describing the consequences of the decisions which we make?"

Well just like the poultry bird example earlier stated, the human imaginative faculty is exclusively designed for decision making and would usually take decisions inorder to suit a subconscious bias self attached goal (i.e something it has previously perceived as valuable), but nevertheless there are consequences for our decisions whether they are indeed "right" or "wrong"...