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Saturday, December 16, 2023

Forty Shades of Grey and other forms of group Insanity known as Justice.



           Is music sound? Life is like a box of chocolates. It can have infinite possible outcomes with eight essential ingredients. Then, it is blanketed by the concept of choice, whether forced or fancy. Cold or hot and sweet or sour. Laws are that box of chocolates with the Justice System gone mad as its judge, jury, and executioner for taste and likelihood of sound judgment. Is the Pot black, or is it hot? Prison is the place of ratification of the soul. Laws likened to the sun's rays will cover everyone and cause melanoma at differing degrees. Yet you still end up cooked to death. Prisons create insanity as the sun creates sunburn into death.

Want more laws? Build more prisons and make up more causes. Cry enough, and even the cows will go home. After a while, no one at any time will be law-abiding. Only hiding who they are. Thus, he becomes the public personality in the body of a demon. What has humanity done to a safe world? Let's dig into it. Its complex causes are based on simple choices. Not found in the ingredients. Humankind went from the Dark Ages, called the Dark Ages for a reason, into the Age of Enlightenment. He had some help through a new way of thinking outside of the church way. Thanks to Thomas Aquinas, Descartes, and Locke, Outside France, the Scottish philosophers and economists David Hume and Adam Smith, the English philosopher Jeremy Bentham, Immanuel Kant of Germany, and the American statesman Thomas Jefferson were notable Enlightenment thinkers. 

Who were the 5 Enlightenment thinkers, and what were their ideas?

Centered on the dialogues and publications of the French "philosophes" (Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Buffon, and Denis Diderot), the High Enlightenment might best be summed up by one historian's summary of Voltaire's "Philosophical Dictionary": "a chaos of clear ideas." Foremost among these was the notion that ...

What are the five philosophies of Enlightenment?

At least six ideas punctuated American Enlightenment thinking: deism, liberalism, republicanism, conservatism, tolerance, and scientific progress. Many of these were shared with European Enlightenment thinkers but took a uniquely American form in some instances. John Locke was the founding father who needed to be understood. His beliefs helped create a Democratic thinking style along with forward-thinking Jamestown founders of the 1600s. We dealt with three significant issues: the Indian, church and king, and slavery, all forms of it. We survived. They all lost except for the domination of Catholicism and its mental illnesses of false hope and false worship. God resides within, not without. My family was at Jonestown, and I take offense at the perverted way modern man has dilated its simple philosophy.

What did John Locke believe in? The justice system is like a box of chocolates because it is based on belief. Even up becomes down at some point. Happy becomes sad at the end of a relationship or death. Cold can become warm with a good fire in the fireplace, plus you get light to read by, according to Abraham Lincoln. 

Locke famously wrote that man has three natural rights: life, liberty, and property. In his "Thoughts Concerning Education" (1693), Locke argued for a broadened syllabus and better treatment of students—ideas that enormously influenced Jean-Jacques Rousseau's novel.

Who was the most impactful Enlightenment thinker?

John Locke

John Locke (29 August 1632 - 28 October 1704) was an English philosopher and physician regarded as one of the most influential Enlightenment thinkers, especially concerning the development of political philosophy. His writings influenced Voltaire and Rousseau, most importantly, the American revolutionaries. And like magic, a new cake was backed that everyone had to eat. You were sent straight to hell or prison if you did not eat the cake. A horse became more potent than your son, who stole him to get away from the bear and thus was hung for it. The line in the dirt had more meaning than God or his words: to love thy neighbor as you love yourself.

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