In my books that's good enough to define the real me.So in the end when you boil down that person that you are to its bare minimum you realize that you are a combination of your parents, your experiences and your tastes that may also rely on your experiences.... — Filipe
So in the end when you boil down that person that you are to its bare minimum you realize that you are a combination of your parents, your experiences and your tastes that may also rely on your experiences.... — Filipe
personality is simply — Filipe
the people that caused them — Filipe
when you boil down that person — Filipe
I learned this when my children were born. I've talked about it with other parents too, and most of them agree. Babies being born are all there. They are the people they will be from the first second. — T Clark
Your being is simply an expression of the universe happening — Filipe
"The child is father to the man." I think William Shakespeare. — god must be atheist
Something about such questions seems very fishy. — Wallows
Why do people focus on questions as to whether something is real or not? — Wallows
I concur. Is reality wrong? — god must be atheist
He probably thinks there are no real fish, as well. — Bitter Crank
Maybe people don't like it (reality) being right all the time? — Wallows
we all got old — god must be atheist
Growing old is a very good thing, because otherwise one is dead. — Bitter Crank
Dylan deserved the Nobel for his poetry. — Bitter Crank
What a bunch of bullshit. He's a songwriter, not a poet. I like some of his stuff, but people worship him. And yes, his voice is crap. — T Clark
Let's make a deal: I'll now say that the Nobel Committee was full of Swedish shit (in awarding the prize to Dylan) and you can now start calling Bob's lyrics poetry. — Bitter Crank
There is no Real you because your personality is simply a compilation of your tastes with your experiences and both of those things are beyond any type of reasonable control. — Filipe
The way the Hanover award is awarded is I carefully review the prospect's body of work, pretending to critically evaluate it, and then I give it to the guy who is most politically aligned with my views. I won it again this year. — Hanover
The three-word question consuming the world’s biggest brains
We have consulted closely with global authorities on economics, history and science about their peers, and considered the books and ideas we can see making waves. The biggest of these waves – by far – are those concerning identity...
What exactly, disparate thinkers are asking, does it mean to be American, Muslim, Indian, female, black or simply human?...
As it happens, the first three names on the list – and they are just alphabetical for now, with a public vote to pick the top 10 open – are all wrestling with identity. Naomi Alderman’s novel Disobedience, about a London rabbi’s bisexual daughter, explores how faith communities can find space for difference; Syrian architect Marwa al-Sabouni explains how deadly walls of misunderstanding in Syria grew up due to a dearth of public spaces; philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah reconciles the importance of grounded identities with the need to protect vulnerable groups...
— Tom Clark
My "real me" isn't something that I believe is ultimately under my control, and it's not something that I take to be simply a compilation of my tastes and experiences. — Terrapin Station
Why do people focus on questions as to whether something is real or not? Something about such questions seems very fishy. — Wallows
There is no Real you because your personality is simply a compilation of your tastes with your experiences and both of those things are beyond any type of reasonable control. — Filipe
So, who are you ? Real or otherwise ? — Amity
A complex of different dynamic bodily parts and functions, where for "personal identity," the focus is on a complex of different dynamic brain functions that amount to mentality--thoughts/ideas, desires, concepts, memories, senses of self, etc. — Terrapin Station
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