liberty work
Sep. 29th, 2011 01:51 pmPeople customarily believe they have control of their thinking and thus their behavior - a belief that is a proven fantasy, causing untold damage in the lives of all members of the human race.
That might seem to be a shocking statement until its correctness is checked by reference to the reality of life itself. What follows briefly explains.
For example, on this planet when people drop things, do they always go downward? Do they ever rise upward? Only young children fail to know that it is nature's law of gravitation that controls what happens when things are dropped - not people.
Careful attention to every aspect of life reveals that laws of nature determine the results of the physical activity of all people. Such laws are called laws of physics.
The reason for the mistaken belief that people's behavior is controlled by them is that they have not been introduced to nature's law of absolute right.
After an earnest appeal to the creator, Richard W. Wetherill in 1929 was given insight into a natural law, controlling the results caused by people's wrong input. He called it the law of absolute right.
http://www.alphapub.com/essays.html
That might seem to be a shocking statement until its correctness is checked by reference to the reality of life itself. What follows briefly explains.
For example, on this planet when people drop things, do they always go downward? Do they ever rise upward? Only young children fail to know that it is nature's law of gravitation that controls what happens when things are dropped - not people.
Careful attention to every aspect of life reveals that laws of nature determine the results of the physical activity of all people. Such laws are called laws of physics.
The reason for the mistaken belief that people's behavior is controlled by them is that they have not been introduced to nature's law of absolute right.
After an earnest appeal to the creator, Richard W. Wetherill in 1929 was given insight into a natural law, controlling the results caused by people's wrong input. He called it the law of absolute right.
http://www.alphapub.com/essays.html