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Truth & Purple Undies (standard:non fiction, 6572 words) | |||
Author: PeterFromOZ | Added: Apr 02 2011 | Views/Reads: 2706/1873 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Truth & Purple Undies is an autobiographical piece of creative writing. | |||
Truth & Purple Undies by Peter E. Williams Warning: This may challenge your belief system. Then again it may reinforce them. Beliefs are a funny thing. We believe what we know to be true, or at least we think we know certain things. But that doesn't necessarily make them so. For example, many centuries ago, in the Middle Ages in think it was, everyone *knew* that the Earth was flat, and that the Sun revolved around the Earth. It was a fact, because everyone knew it. If anyone doubted this then they were probably a witch, and we burn witches at the stake. You'd believe too, if you knew what was good for you. But of course, the Flat Earthers' beliefs were based on truisms: that large parts of the Earth probably all that they knew of were indeed largely flatish. Certainly there was no denying that there were mountains, but it was a flat slab Earth was. In fact if you sailed too far you'd sail clear off the edges of the Earth. Of course the Flat Earth Society was disbanded a long time ago, but not until there were photos of the Earth taken from the moon. And even then, they were argued to be distortions of photography by many die-hard Flat Earthers. Of course in our modern society we wouldn't believe such foolish things. Things without proof. Or would we? For years scientist knew that there wasn't a hole in the ozone layer. After all they had taken readings. Some of those readings were actually off the scale erroneous numbers, which of course the software ignored because it had been told in it's program that *if* they were too large then they must be an error. Then one day, one scientist sort of said, Hang about, what if these number aren't actually errors. What would that mean? It would mean there's a hole in the ozone layer. And so a hole in the ozone layer was discovered. They didn't actually ever *know* that there wasn't a hole in the ozone layer. It's just that they never really considered that there *was* a hole. Not considering that something is or isn't the case isn't quite the same as knowing it. It just means that it hasn't be thought about. For example, I bet the up until right now you didn't know that I'm wearing purple undies. Now that you thought about, I suppose that you consider it to be a possibility. You probably didn't think about it because you didn't care, or it didn't occur to you. It didn't seem relevant. Now that I've said it, you know it or at least you think you know it. It all depends on whether I'm telling the truth. Only I can really say. And I'm not telling. Unless of course someone was to rush around here right now and demand to see for themselves (to obtain proof). Of course some people believe things without any proof at all. Religion is a classic example. No-one can prove to you one way or the other whether the Big Cheese really exists or not. Call him whatever you like: God, Krishna, Buddha ... whatever. It's a matter of faith. Sure there's the Bible or the Koran or The Book or Mormon or whatever. But then some will say that they're just stories. But others will say Why would anyone write them if they weren't true. Or at least the people who wrote them believed in what they were writing. After all they were written by Prophets with divine inspiration; with an afflatus. People's religious beliefs are usually founded in something. Usually it's a long family and cultural tradition. And all through the good times their mum and dad, or whoever, had those beliefs and we all went along to church or the temple as the case may be, and had those beliefs drummed in to them and reinforced. And the message was always the same: do the right things and it'll be OK in the end. HE likes you when you've behaving yourself and believing in HIM. Of course if you were some kind of ruling King (back in the Middle Ages) or something then I suppose that inventing a religion would be just the ticket for keeping the peasants in line. I'm sure that at some time in history The Church of England was invented. I picked that one because it's my religion well officially. Whether I actually subscribe to what they preach is another thing. Click here to read the rest of this story (559 more lines)
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