There he was standing undecided what to buy. He knew exactly what he wanted to buy. He knew how everything worked, right down to the low down nitty-gritty details. He knows where the nuts and the bolts should fit in. He knew what is the latest gizmo in town and what is the newest 'kit in the block'. And he knew how much each item costs. In short, he knew the good, the bad, the ugly and anything in between. But yet, he cannot decide on his latest gadget that he wants to lay his hands on.
Item A is superior in one aspect which is less efficient than item B but is more pricey as compared to item C which in turn is more durable than item D and the list goes on. At the end of the day, he is at his wit's end on what to do next. The thought of losing his hard earned money to a sub-standard merchandise is unacceptable in his book. So he waits. The trouble is that this is not the first time he is caught in this type of conundrum. Again and again he feels fleeced as he always knows that there is something better out there!
His neighbour, on the other hand, never had life so good. With his newly gained windfall, life cannot be better. He sees something, he likes it and he buys it. Simple.
I guess that why they say ignorance is bliss. Things are easy when you are ignorant like what the Beatles said "Living is easy with eyes closed"! (Strawberry Fields).
Surprise, surprise. Even in the 3rd century BCE, the fear of information overload was suggested by Seneca the Elder who lived during the reign of Augustus, Aurelius and Caligula. His son, Seneca, a philosopher, served Nero but was forced to commit suicide when he was accused of conspiring to poison the Emperor!
This fear was highlighted again when Gutenberg's printing press took the world by storm. It was thought that man's ability to absorb all those vast information and to be able to make quality decisions was suspect.
Words like 'information glut', 'infobesity', 'infoxication', 'data smog' were thrown in as time went on and ICT opened the floodgates of information.
A learned man can be a confused one. The thin line separates the ingenious and the insane. Many things were left unanswered to be discovered by ourselves and for us to draw our own conclusions. Perhaps, the level of ignorance amongst us is the only quality that help us to be level headed and be level on the ground we stand on. Ignorance is the driving force that makes the human race want to explore and makes us reflect upon ourselves and our fellow earthlings.
FG says that deciding to buy something is like ordering in a Chinese restaurant. After finalising on your order, you would realise that the Joneses at the next table have a nicer more palatable-looking spread and you wish you had ordered the same. The same can be said about life partners unless it is decided at the end of a shot gun! It all comes in a package, the good, the bad and is all at how you look at it.
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The Smoking Man of X Files: Are you sure you
want to know the whole truth? I do not think you
can handle the Truth!
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His neighbour, on the other hand, never had life so good. With his newly gained windfall, life cannot be better. He sees something, he likes it and he buys it. Simple.
I guess that why they say ignorance is bliss. Things are easy when you are ignorant like what the Beatles said "Living is easy with eyes closed"! (Strawberry Fields).
Surprise, surprise. Even in the 3rd century BCE, the fear of information overload was suggested by Seneca the Elder who lived during the reign of Augustus, Aurelius and Caligula. His son, Seneca, a philosopher, served Nero but was forced to commit suicide when he was accused of conspiring to poison the Emperor!
This fear was highlighted again when Gutenberg's printing press took the world by storm. It was thought that man's ability to absorb all those vast information and to be able to make quality decisions was suspect.
Words like 'information glut', 'infobesity', 'infoxication', 'data smog' were thrown in as time went on and ICT opened the floodgates of information.
A learned man can be a confused one. The thin line separates the ingenious and the insane. Many things were left unanswered to be discovered by ourselves and for us to draw our own conclusions. Perhaps, the level of ignorance amongst us is the only quality that help us to be level headed and be level on the ground we stand on. Ignorance is the driving force that makes the human race want to explore and makes us reflect upon ourselves and our fellow earthlings.
FG says that deciding to buy something is like ordering in a Chinese restaurant. After finalising on your order, you would realise that the Joneses at the next table have a nicer more palatable-looking spread and you wish you had ordered the same. The same can be said about life partners unless it is decided at the end of a shot gun! It all comes in a package, the good, the bad and is all at how you look at it.