TheDayAfterYesterday
Apprentice Member
When the game ends, the pawn and the king go into the same box
Posts: 118
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Post by TheDayAfterYesterday on Feb 16, 2016 15:53:46 GMT -6
Do you change as a person when you learn something new? For example, someone stumbles upon a documentary about why you shouldn't eat meat, but the person watching hasn't really thought much about the situation, making them neutral. The person has just finished watching the entire documentary and now they're conflicted with the thought of taking the documentary's advice and changing their eating habits or continuing their normal lifestyle as an omnivore. With their current knowledge of the situation, would it be fair to assume the line of neutrality can't be crossed now? In guilt, the person decides to keep the life they've always known, still eating meat. Now they can't shake off the feeling that they themselves are a bad people. Now let's say it's the other way around and the person is now a vegetarian, I'd assume they'd feel like a good samaritan.
They're so many examples to be used, so this will be the last. The typical gamer versus the game developer scenario; the gamer gets frustrated for not receiving a better sequel, but when the gamer learns how to make their own game whose to say they'll agree with how they were behaving.
Yes, most of the time I change though I don't like to admit it. In the case it is a no, I'm usually trying to confirm my suspicions about something.
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Post by universalfiction on Jun 29, 2016 9:02:42 GMT -6
Yeah, like Baph said my mind becomes more open than it was before. I usually just take everything into consideration and think about it for a long time because personalities or normal actions (like habits) aren't easily changeable for me. Plus, I'm not an adult yet so I have to eat everything on my plate, including meat.
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Post by maxcburger on Dec 29, 2016 0:30:23 GMT -6
Thanks for discussing this matter with us.
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