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Philosophy Botley Oxford
Here is your Thursday STORY on: ADAPTING TO CHANGE: Just when you think you've sorted it... everything goes wrong! Complacency is problem waiting to happen. When you start a new job for example, you may find that the first ten weeks you're attentive and excited about every task and consequently very few mistakes are made. Once you think you've got the hang of the job you become complacent. Rife time I may add for errors to happen in multiples. Complacency is another name for going onto auto-pilot; thinking that you can do a job with only half the attention. There is an opposite of this situation where you dwell on something far too long and unnecessarily; imagining that events will unfold when in actual fact you are too premature in thought. Complacency and being assumptive are two opposites. Complacency takes no effort and being assumptive can leave you tired and restless. When a change is due to happen we can never really be sure what events will unfold. The best preparation is to be fully attentive throughout, guaranteeing our capacity to resolve is at its peak. This next story illustrates how we can worry unduly about events that could happen; but eventually don't come to pass. THE BEST INTERVIEW Yesterday is a day that I won't forget for a long time. My 9-year-old daughter had told me yesterday morning that one of her year-younger friends (third grade) wanted to interview me for a school assignment. Wow! A third-grader wants to interview me! I was thrilled. All during the day, I was anticipating questions and how I would respond. "How did you become CyberSis?" I could hear her ask. "How many hours do you work on the column?" was another obvious question. "How many readers do you have?" might pop in there as a candidate. I prepared to field most questions she could throw at me with responses that would be comprehended by 8-year-old children. Nothing too complicated. Nothing too condescending. A tough job, if you really think about it. While shopping at a fresh produce stand, I imagined all the similes and metaphors I could use (for comedic effect) using fruit. "What do you think of your work?", answered with "It's a peach"! "How do you think people see you?" to be followed with "I'm a watermelon -- hard on the outside, but soft at the centre." All day long, the muted excitement built. I even changed clothes, just to appear "fresher" for the interview. When I went to the bus stop, I was primed! Upon returning home, I offered the girls after school refreshments. Anxious to begin, I asked Kayla where she would like to hold the interview. She said, "Oh, its okay. I don't need to interview you. I found somebody else." Crestfallen (to say the very least) I replied, "Oh, really? Who did you get to interview?" trying to mentally size up the competition. She said, "Oh, just my mother's boss's mother." "Really?" was my catchy comeback. "And what type of work does SHE do?" "I don't think she works. She's in a rest home." Not seeing any relationship between the targeted interview subjects, I asked, "Why did you happen to chose her?" "I had to interview somebody REALLY old, around 50, who could tell me about life in the 1960's. She LOOKS a LOT older than you do!" she casually commented, munching on carrot sticks. And that was the best interview I never had. (P. L. Sweeney) QUOTE: 'Here on the edge of the twenty-first century, a fundamental new rule of business is that the Internet changes everything.' ('Business @ The Speed Of Thought' by Bill Gates (1999))
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Philosophy Botley Oxford News
International students Visit Somaiya Vidyavihar for Launch of Book and Sessio...
25 May 2012 at 10:23pm ![]() ChakraNews.com | ChakraNews.com ... As Jainism encourages spiritual development through cultivation of one's own personal wisdom and reliance on self control through vows, Somaiya has taken a step further as a part of their teaching and educating students through Jain philosophy. |
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Word of the Day | suborn - New York Times (blog)
24 May 2012 at 10:07pm New York Times (blog) ... Church would not control the government and suborn its independence advanced a philosophy of strict separation that would create a purely secular public square cleansed of all religious wisdom and the voice of religious people of all faiths. |
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Veteran counsels wisdom of listening - River Forest Leaves
24 May 2012 at 12:01pm River Forest Leaves For the Oak Park resident and Triton College philosophy teacher, the past is prologue. ?The past is very relevant to the present,? he said. ?I want to keep the continuity with the past alive.? As he grows older, Griffin said life is getting better for ... and more » |
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Chemistry by Candlelight - Wired News
24 May 2012 at 8:47am Wired News ?There is no better, there is no more open door by which you can enter into the study of natural philosophy than by considering the physical phenomena of a candle.? It was the above line that first caught my attention. The recognition that we often ... |
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Canucks GM's philosophy of change doesn't include Vigneault - Canada.com
23 May 2012 at 8:18pm Canada.com And, over the last month, that philosophy was put to the test. While the precise details haven't been fully disclosed, the accepted wisdom has it that Canucks ownership wasn't as enthusiastic about retaining the head coach as the general manager. and more » |
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Philip K. Dick, Sci-Fi Philosopher, Part 1 - New York Times (blog)
20 May 2012 at 3:00pm ![]() New York Times (blog) | New York Times (blog) 20, 1974, Dick was hit with the force of an extraordinary revelation after a visit to the dentist for an impacted wisdom tooth for which he had received a dose of sodium pentothal. A young woman delivered a bottle of Darvon tablets to his apartment in ... and more » |
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For Mother's Day, the gift of earned wisdom - News & Observer
12 May 2012 at 10:08pm News & Observer And I recently received some rude and uninvited parenting advice from a stranger that prompted me to think about what, if any, ?parenting philosophy? I hold. That question made me laugh aloud because I realized (a) my parenting style is pretty much ... and more » |
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Six Pieces of Wisdom and Advice for College Grads, Inspired By and Borrowed ....
11 May 2012 at 2:41pm Huffington Post (This was paraphrased by Norman, but originally thought to have originated from the philosopher Goethe.) With a surface-level read, this may seem obvious and potentially overused -- as in, work hard and it will all work out for you. |
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The "Wisdom" of Pearson's Pineapple Passage - Huffington Post
10 May 2012 at 9:30am Huffington Post Clearly Pearson and Tisch need some lessons in classical philosophy. I decided to read up about wisdom in the University of Chicago's The Great Ideas, A Syntopicon of Great Books of the Western World edited by noted philosopher Mortimer Adler and ... and more » |
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Why every government should keep an empty seat for a philosopher king - The G...
10 May 2012 at 6:30am The Guardian Socrates has defined the philosopher as not just a lover of wisdom but as a special kind of seer, someone dedicated to knowledge of capital-T truth. It follows that this exceptional fellow is the sole person fit to rule any city, including the ideal ... |
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