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The Guardians of Freedom - Part 3 (standard:other, 9953 words) [3/7] show all parts | |||
Author: Dan Tana | Added: Feb 03 2011 | Views/Reads: 2314/1730 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Teddy transmits a tale of how it made some new friends and helped save the world from religious fanaticism. | |||
This is a transmission of thoughts from Teddy, the toy who got dropped by my clumsy Goo friend and fell to this planet from the dimension where I was constructed. Since my arrival here I have seen many of you human beings free your minds from the ideologies and beliefs that oppress the people of this world. More of you than ever before have chosen to question and reject those ideas that are constantly being invented and accepted by some human minds in order to encourage and excuse the subjugation, exploitation, and harm of certain people for the benefit of others. But, sadly, these hurtful ideologies are still quite prevalent in this world today. Often cloaked in notions of religion, tradition, morality, or propriety, or else simple pragmatism, such ideas continue to deceive and placate the consciences of countless people, allowing them to actually feel proud of themselves, rather than guilty, as they do things that bring incalculable amounts of unnecessary unhappiness to vast numbers of people. As someone who cares about the well-being of the people who inhabit this planet I vehemently oppose such beliefs, and will do what I can to eliminate them, in order to spare you all the harm that they cause. But I cannot rid this world of such ideas, and their unpleasant consequences, as long as you human beings continue to believe in, promote, and empower them. So I am making this transmission in the hope that it will reach some of you, helping you to better understand the nature of these ideas so that you will then make the choice to discard and oppose them. The easiest thing to understand about these ideas that justify the physical or psychological harm of other people for your own material benefit or mental gratification is why most of you human beings want to believe in them. Obviously, it is because you were not created with the simple, altruistic desires of a toy like me, and so you care about yourself more than those other people. Somewhat less obvious is the reason why most of you who accept these beliefs also embrace certain other ideas that allow you to think that you have a more substantial, less selfish, entirely objective and rational reason for believing such things. You do that because you find it uncomfortable to acknowledge how superficial and self-serving you are in what you choose to believe, and prefer to think that you accept these beliefs only because they reflect some kind of universal truth. You who think this way choose to overlook, ignore, and deny the fundamental limitation of any finite mind, which is that it knows only what it experiences. You refuse to admit that all of your complex, abstract thoughts and beliefs are based upon certain assumptions that you have drawn from your experiences – or your imagination - which you cannot actually prove to be correct. Of course I cannot objectively prove that nobody can ever prove that its beliefs are objectively true. But I accept this idea as a most probable truth because I have seen no other belief in any of the minds that I have scanned that is not in some way predicated upon certain unproven assumptions. Most of you understand the logic of this perspective. But many do not like to think about it too much, because the empty, endless abyss of uncertainty that a mind must face when it acknowledges its inability to really know the ultimate truths of its own existence can be rather disturbing. So many of you hide from that unpleasant, desolate feeling by clinging to the illusion of certain knowledge, and refusing to consider the innately questionable nature of all those beliefs that you use to make some sense of your existence. But some of you are brave enough to renounce the comforting delusion of this false certainty, like my friend Liam Carter, who, with my help, found the courage to face the reality of his own overwhelming ignorance. This made it possible for him to honestly evaluate and ultimately reject the troublesome ideologies that he had been taught to believe. By doing so Liam freed himself, and all the people of this world, from the clutches of the miserable, closed-minded person who he had been. Click here to read the rest of this story (910 more lines)
This is part 3 of a total of 7 parts. | ||
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