When a change in perception takes place, the facts do not change. Their meaning does.
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When a change in perception takes place, the facts do not change. Their meaning does.
Truth does not change, only our awareness of it.
Beliefs do not change facts. Facts, if one is rational, should change beliefs.
Truth does not change because it is, or is not, believed by a majority of the people.
Time, which changes people, does not alter the image we have of them.
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View PlansChange alone is unchanging.
What prevents theoretical insights from going beyond existing limitations and changing to meet new facts is just the belief that theories give true knowledge of reality (which implies, of course, that they need never change).
People don't change, their situations change. My circumstances can improve or grow worse but it's always myself in the midst of them, unchanged in my private essence.
Things change, but they stay the same.
At the end of the day, whether one returns to the past or travels to the future, the present does not change.
In The Lazy Man’s Guide to Enlightenment, Thaddeus Golas says, “You never have to change what you see, only the way you see it.
Every advance in our acuteness of perception will show us something thing new; but the old and first-discerned thing will still be there, not falsified, only modified and enriched by the new perceptions, becoming continually more beautiful in its harmony with them, and more approved as a part of the infinite truth.
Single facts almost never slay worldviews, at least not right away.
Remember: in order for a perception to change one must be frustrated in one's actions or change one's purpose.
The only thing that never changes is that everything changes.