It’s called the power of the serpent, it’s the human tongue, that’s why Einstein has a famous picturing him with his tongue out... he’s symbolically representing the serpent priesthood, the fall of man from paradise into hello is centered in around forging document using the serpent to claim and maintain power ...
tree 木 and the first kanji of hontou 本当 which is 本/ hon in on reading or motto in kun reading, are two different kanji. 本 means book or origin and 木 means tree. this is why Japan in japanese is Nihon 日本 which means sun origin
that's very interesting.. that proved our anchestors have relation by their language or just have some lucky same thought.. note: 木 is east-asia word that means tree.. #justinfo
That's a heck of a linguistic coincidence. I'm confident they're not related but I love learning about written words and writing systems from other people.
The animation, graphics, explanation, information, his voice, the slides, the background music is perfectly to the point... It's not only soothing my heart but also cherish my brain... Thanks a lot... Want more videos like this....
every time i watch ted video is always end up with amazement. so inspiring and mind blowing. makes me want to know more about this world. thanks ted! :)
Just a few days ago it hit me that the English word 'true' and the Danish word for 'faith/to believe' (tro) were related. Seems I was sort of right. Interesting video!
For comparison, instead of ancient pagan spiritualism and beliefs in trees, in Slavic languages the word "truth" is akin to "righteousness" in the meaning, it is connected to the concept of "right" and "straight" that about about "correct" way of doing or understanding things. In Chinese the word "truth" comes from hieroglyphs meaning someone positioned straight on top of some sort of table/podium from where h/se could establish what is going on, what is "real", what is actually happening. Because of this the hieroglyphs for "truth" and "real" are similar even to this day.
Tree try having my name. Cameron Tré Taylor... and the city I’ve lived in my entire life and still do is sealed as “the city of trees” ... it’s like wtf! I really did send myself here before I was born!
0:57 This doesn't say Chinese language it literally says "of China" which makes me thing the animator got that by typing "Chinese" into google translate
Wonderful. Mesmerised by the graphics. Yet for me it missed a central metaphor - that a tree only ever produces 'true to type' - for example you can always count on an apple tree to only ever produce apples.
1:50: Trust, Betroth and truce are not further up the family tree, but further down. 'true' < Protogermanic truuu-a- 'loyal, faithful' is the direct stem of the e-root. 2:15 'Tree' and 'true' are not the same word in Old English lexicon and of course not in the mind of of its speakers. The common basis of these words is much more deeper in the past: at least 6000 years. 2:29 The problem with the steadiness of trees metaphor is that there is nothing so unsteady as the Indo-European tree words as a result of the expansion of IE into areas with previously unknown trees. That's why trees are more like vague treenesses in the European IE languages. The truth can't be associated with the the uprightness of an oak, because the common root was thousands of years before the first IE speaker ever saw an oak. This is the reason why Greek and Latin use beech for oaks. The beeches, German Buche, were seen by IE speaker for the first time on German soil. 2:42 Trees as the oldest living organisms on this planet: This has nothing to do with the history of these words. It is an ad hoc explanation. I don't really understand what connection the video really wants to make, but it seems to me that 'true' was named after the steadiness and consistency of long-living trees. This ist Osthoff (Parerga I) from 1901. Today, we know that it goes the other way round: 'Tree' comes from 'true' (or better German 'treu' = faithful, loyal), because the tree-branch of that root is an h2-derivation of the common root. It didn't denote trees as plants but simply the hardness of wood as a material.
The only real issue I can see in this whole thing is saying that treow meant Tree in old english. But overall he only took a shortcut to say that treow does have a very close parenting, etymologically, with 'tree' in Indo-European. It wasn't exactly "the other way around", it's just that the word used for solid or steadfast objects was used to describe trees in a lot of languages and evolved into treow as well in old english... At the end of the day it was vulgarization but I wouldn't exactly hold itagainst them, the main point is to transmit some knowledge for people who are interested to do some research of their own, not to give an english lecture.
This is a short video I wrote for a target audience of high school students, not a presentation at a historical linguistics conference. Nonetheless, I am happy to respond to your detailed commentary. The 'further up' rather than 'further down' the family tree is a stylistic animation choice; the script is correct in claiming that these words all share a source. Also, no claim is made that the words for 'tree' and 'true' are the same in the Old English mind, but it is accurate that , properly inflected, could mean either. Just because speakers may not be aware of the relationships between words does not mean that the relationships don't exist; for example, see my other video on the 'doubt.' It is absolutely true that the spelling is attested in Old English texts with both meanings -- not necessarily In the same texts, or even in the same dialects, but the attestations are well-documented. The specific examples of oaks and birches are not meant to be biologically precise, but conceptually relevant. And no claim is made about the directionality of the derivation; the video doesn't claim that derived from , but that they share an origin, which they do. The point of the piece about the age of trees, and their sacred place in many cultures, is that trees have been a powerful constant in the human experience. It's not ad hoc, but germane to the connection between the two words. The video is not a science lesson; rather, it tells a story. A true story.
Gina Cooke Gina, I liked the video, but have you thought about what impression it makes to normal people? Do you really think, they say: That's quite an impressionistic feature out of Gina's beautiful mind, but let's not confuse it with real research! They'll think that this is how it truly has happened. They think that there was one word threow in OE that had two meanings: tree and true. Because people were wiser than we are and always thought of the widom of trees when it comes to truth. Actually, there were two words that by coincidence of the English sound laws had the same form and were used differently. In all other Germanic languages at that time, they had different forms, Old Norse thus for instance: tré (tree) and truyggur (true). Or Gothic: triu (tree) and triggws (true). Your video is a little bit like the Prometheus movie: Everything is connected with everything somehow, but when you think about it, it makes no sense. Wouldn't it be more fascinating to learn how people who lived a long time ago, really imagined the world?
I loved the silence at the end when he spoke the last words. Without that load annoying ending note that blows your ear-drums halfway through the room. Just silence... Ahhhhhh...
The Chinese characters that are shown on 0:58 are simplified Chinese, which are definitely not the most 'historical' type among all Chinese written systems. It is a system that was popularised by the Communist in the 1950s to encourage literacy, as traditional Chinese was considered too difficult to master for general public. Hence it would be more accurate to use traditional Chinese in your video to represent the long history of Chinese
True is a cognate of the German word "treu", meaning faithful or loyal. Faithful to reality literally translates to "realitätsgetreu" or "wirklichkeitsgetreu" but these terms are mostly used to describe naturalistic paintings, sculptures, miniature models and the like. I assume the relevant meaning here was rather "wahrheitsgetreu" (faithful to [the] truth), which is obviously more or less just a fancy way of saying "wahr" (true). Circle closed! So is a true friend the same as "ein treuer Freund"? Yes and no. The accurate translation of a true friend is "ein wahrer Freund" whilst "ein treuer Freund" is a loyal friend -- but since an illoyal friend isn't really a true friend, this distinguation is rather redundant. Of course loyalty should be kept within reasonable borders. As a German I'm aware of the problem caused by unlimited loyalty (in German: "grenzenlose Loyalität" or "unerschütterliche Treue"), with "unerschütterlich" actually meaning unshakeable or steadfast, leading back to the property of that massive tree that made up the root of the word true. In the same way that regal and royal are more or less the same, one coming directly from Latin, the other one taking the detour through French, legal and loyal are also cognates of one another, although their meanings have diverged significantly. The German word for legal is "gesetzestreu" (faithful to the law), a word of course that nobody in Germany ever uses... or do they?
In Medieval literature trees and long amounts of time are both martial images. It’s interesting that in our language the same connections exist but under different origins. Perhaps there is such a thing as universal imagery or even a universal language which once existed before branching off into the languages of today?
I tought that too for a moment, but then I thought if this Gina Cooke wants to make a cool lesson about the word 'true', TED-Ed would be more than happy to put it online.
The Mysteries of Vernacular is its own series that TED shares, but this video is a TED original. Also, the MoV films illustrate the etymology of a single word, whereas this video goes a little farther by illustrating the relationships between the histories of two words.
Funny, I found that to be the most interesting part. It just shows how ancient people had a very limited vocabulary compared to modern languages. They had to rely on one word where we now have many, and so they had to make these connections and associations using the few words they did have. I find that fascinating, and obviously a different truth than what you got from watching.
I kind of hoped this would debunk what most people think it means for something to be true. But it was entertaining nevertheless, and it was alluded to I guess.
I was hoping for that as well. We all need a new definition of 'truth' after surviving this election cycle. Seems to me that truth is so much more malleable than I had thought, mostly due to one's perspective, but still, even the facts seem relative these days.
The word druid doesn't share a common origin with E. tree nor G. δρῦς "oak tree", it is an erroneous folk etymology which can be traced back to a definite Classical source, due to similarity of the words' transliterated appearances or spellings. Druid ("prophet", or more accurately "seer") is actually *dru-vid with the first element putting emphasis to the second core stem vid- and very comparable to toponyms like Drunemeton. The second element derived from the same root with PIE *weyd- "to see", and is a sibling with L. videre "to see", and hence the meaning "to know, comprehend and understand". Interestingly, the meanings of "to see/vision" and "know/kenning" tend to intertwine with each other, not only in Indo-European languages but also in other languages, from daily conversations like "I see" meaning "I know/understand", and in French savoir and voir have similar morphology in modern stage, though in earlier Latin stage their origins were sapere and videre respectively.
"A single word can tell a story" Ted-ED the true story of 'true' - Gina Cooke Tell me about it, I'm learning Japanese and a lot of Kanji have radicals (parts of the drawing) which can have meaning within the written word itself and combine with other kanji to mean a multitude of things. You can infer a lot of origins of kanji within the meaning word itself.
well thats not entirely true. its only your perception of what your hands and eyes are telling you that they "feel" or "see" and that is all different what if u have burns on your hands or astigmatism in your eyes, perhaps something else that alters their "perception" of your surrounding. tiss all up to philosophy.
I don't know why, but this guy's voice keeps me coming back, It's just relaxing listening to him speaking lol
Same!
I KNOW RIGHT I RLLY WANT TO MEET HIM
True !
It’s called the power of the serpent, it’s the human tongue, that’s why Einstein has a famous picturing him with his tongue out... he’s symbolically representing the serpent priesthood, the fall of man from paradise into hello is centered in around forging document using the serpent to claim and maintain power ...
That’s weird man 😂
Props to the animator. This is some good work there!
Do you know how do they do it ?
One of my favourite ted-ed videos of all time, more like this please :))
ขุนเขามีคําตอบ - Answers from Khunkhao check this out- ua-cam.com/video/FwX6TaD1fzA/v-deo.html
Eh
They dont miss
The animation was beautiful
One word for 'True' in Japanese is 本当 whose first character '本' is also the character for tree.
+Terence Britton very very interesting. i guess it's because of shintoism and the same kind of thought processes as Western people have made
tree 木 and the first kanji of hontou 本当 which is 本/ hon in on reading or motto in kun reading, are two different kanji. 本 means book or origin and 木 means tree. this is why Japan in japanese is Nihon 日本 which means sun origin
that's very interesting.. that proved our anchestors have relation by their language or just have some lucky same thought..
note: 木 is east-asia word that means tree.. #justinfo
But even the kanji for origin comes from the kanji for tree, it just adds a single horizontal stroke to represent the roots of the tree.
That's a heck of a linguistic coincidence. I'm confident they're not related but I love learning about written words and writing systems from other people.
loved the storytelling, animation and narration.. it just gave me goosebumps at the end.. so that's true power of truth.
Thank you! So glad you enjoyed it!
Seen many TED-ED and liked them a lot.
But this one is simply fascinating!
Great job
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it!
夏維瑄 哈哈,但是他们写了"中国的",没写"中文"。
The animation, graphics, explanation, information, his voice, the slides, the background music is perfectly to the point... It's not only soothing my heart but also cherish my brain... Thanks a lot... Want more videos like this....
I could listen all day to this Addison Anderson man. Why is his voice so lullaby-like?
It'd be great to get a full series of these animated etymology videos - very enjoyable! :)
the tree will set you free
every time i watch ted video is always end up with amazement. so inspiring and mind blowing. makes me want to know more about this world. thanks ted! :)
Goosebumps after goosebumps... This is the best story told
I love the way this video was put together.
Just a few days ago it hit me that the English word 'true' and the Danish word for 'faith/to believe' (tro) were related. Seems I was sort of right. Interesting video!
+PaltryPete Im Danish, and i can confirm your statement :)
I learned that old English actually has the same grammar as German so my language is kind of the mother of you language :D
Same in Swedish also of course :)
Songbird Both English and German have developed from a single language called Proto-Germanic, that's why they are similar.
For comparison, instead of ancient pagan spiritualism and beliefs in trees, in Slavic languages the word "truth" is akin to "righteousness" in the meaning, it is connected to the concept of "right" and "straight" that about about "correct" way of doing or understanding things. In Chinese the word "truth" comes from hieroglyphs meaning someone positioned straight on top of some sort of table/podium from where h/se could establish what is going on, what is "real", what is actually happening. Because of this the hieroglyphs for "truth" and "real" are similar even to this day.
One of the best videos from TED-Ed. Also, beautiful animation! Great! 👏🏻
I learned something today.
That's the goal, isn't it? Glad you liked it.
^_^
The truth
Awesome animation. Whoever came up with this style is a great professional
I was blown away by the video. It was very well made and the connections made was awesome! I guess you do learn something new everyday :)
I love watching and listening to your videos ❤️
Excellent video! Visually *and* verbally. Thank you.
One of the best videos of ted-ed
This is why I love etymology =)
Well my mind is blown. Had this nickname or username for 20 years. Maybe I truly am a tree druid.
Tree wtf youtube is 10 years old not 20
LOLeq21
But nicknames can be used outside UA-cam
Tree try having my name. Cameron Tré Taylor... and the city I’ve lived in my entire life and still do is sealed as “the city of trees” ... it’s like wtf! I really did send myself here before I was born!
true
that was one of the most beautiful ted eds ever made
The animation is so beautiful
In Proto-Celtic the word for truth is wîrjâ and twig is wejâ and tree beljâ, this is so fascinating.
I've read that the word Druid came from the same root as truth. Tree worshipers? You made another connection I'd never thought of.
0:40 such awesome animation
0:57 This doesn't say Chinese language it literally says "of China" which makes me thing the animator got that by typing "Chinese" into google translate
MrBkbnk 就是!
same with the greek
Spotted that too. Lame animator lol
@@leideneric everything else was beautiful tho ✨
你说对了
One of the most interesting words to me is "melancholy". It has such a vast story with many different odds and ends.
Intrigued.
It'd be cool if this video delved deeper into the connection of trees and truth in the Biblical sense.
Great video!
This guy’s voice is so relaxing 😎 😌.
One of the best animation styles!!
that ending *deserves* a sub
Wonderful. Mesmerised by the graphics. Yet for me it missed a central metaphor - that a tree only ever produces 'true to type' - for example you can always count on an apple tree to only ever produce apples.
That was awesome.
Great etymology. Thank you!
Nice and relaxing story.Definitely true and faithful to reality.Real as a tree.
I love it when these videos get philosophical
I LOVE this animation + the voice
Beautiful. Thank you.
1:50: Trust, Betroth and truce are not further up the family tree, but further down. 'true' < Protogermanic truuu-a- 'loyal, faithful' is the direct stem of the e-root.
2:15 'Tree' and 'true' are not the same word in Old English lexicon and of course not in the mind of of its speakers. The common basis of these words is much more deeper in the past: at least 6000 years.
2:29 The problem with the steadiness of trees metaphor is that there is nothing so unsteady as the Indo-European tree words as a result of the expansion of IE into areas with previously unknown trees. That's why trees are more like vague treenesses in the European IE languages. The truth can't be associated with the the uprightness of an oak, because the common root was thousands of years before the first IE speaker ever saw an oak. This is the reason why Greek and Latin use beech for oaks. The beeches, German Buche, were seen by IE speaker for the first time on German soil.
2:42 Trees as the oldest living organisms on this planet: This has nothing to do with the history of these words. It is an ad hoc explanation.
I don't really understand what connection the video really wants to make, but it seems to me that 'true' was named after the steadiness and consistency of long-living trees. This ist Osthoff (Parerga I) from 1901.
Today, we know that it goes the other way round: 'Tree' comes from 'true' (or better German 'treu' = faithful, loyal), because the tree-branch of that root is an h2-derivation of the common root. It didn't denote trees as plants but simply the hardness of wood as a material.
The only real issue I can see in this whole thing is saying that treow meant Tree in old english. But overall he only took a shortcut to say that treow does have a very close parenting, etymologically, with 'tree' in Indo-European.
It wasn't exactly "the other way around", it's just that the word used for solid or steadfast objects was used to describe trees in a lot of languages and evolved into treow as well in old english...
At the end of the day it was vulgarization but I wouldn't exactly hold itagainst them, the main point is to transmit some knowledge for people who are interested to do some research of their own, not to give an english lecture.
Nevermind, you're right, it was the other way around.
This is a short video I wrote for a target audience of high school students, not a presentation at a historical linguistics conference. Nonetheless, I am happy to respond to your detailed commentary. The 'further up' rather than 'further down' the family tree is a stylistic animation choice; the script is correct in claiming that these words all share a source. Also, no claim is made that the words for 'tree' and 'true' are the same in the Old English mind, but it is accurate that , properly inflected, could mean either. Just because speakers may not be aware of the relationships between words does not mean that the relationships don't exist; for example, see my other video on the 'doubt.' It is absolutely true that the spelling is attested in Old English texts with both meanings -- not necessarily In the same texts, or even in the same dialects, but the attestations are well-documented. The specific examples of oaks and birches are not meant to be biologically precise, but conceptually relevant. And no claim is made about the directionality of the derivation; the video doesn't claim that derived from , but that they share an origin, which they do. The point of the piece about the age of trees, and their sacred place in many cultures, is that trees have been a powerful constant in the human experience. It's not ad hoc, but germane to the connection between the two words. The video is not a science lesson; rather, it tells a story. A true story.
And, for the record, I'm not a "he." Didn't your high school English teacher ever tell you not to confuse the narrator with the author?
Gina Cooke Gina, I liked the video, but have you thought about what impression it makes to normal people? Do you really think, they say: That's quite an impressionistic feature out of Gina's beautiful mind, but let's not confuse it with real research! They'll think that this is how it truly has happened.
They think that there was one word threow in OE that had two meanings: tree and true. Because people were wiser than we are and always thought of the widom of trees when it comes to truth.
Actually, there were two words that by coincidence of the English sound laws had the same form and were used differently. In all other Germanic languages at that time, they had different forms, Old Norse thus for instance: tré (tree) and truyggur (true). Or Gothic: triu (tree) and triggws (true).
Your video is a little bit like the Prometheus movie: Everything is connected with everything somehow, but when you think about it, it makes no sense. Wouldn't it be more fascinating to learn how people who lived a long time ago, really imagined the world?
Words and language in particular are very interesting. How and what made us decide what words meant what?
Captivating
I don’t understand how this doesn’t have more views
Truth Be Told.
I loved the silence at the end when he spoke the last words. Without that load annoying ending note that blows your ear-drums halfway through the room. Just silence... Ahhhhhh...
Thanks you, guys, for video!
That was absolutely brilliant.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it.
Please make more etymology videos!
So poetic
I'm inlove with the animation
Lovely tale well told!
I love the animations
3:06 that squirrel LOL!
The Chinese characters that are shown on 0:58 are simplified Chinese, which are definitely not the most 'historical' type among all Chinese written systems. It is a system that was popularised by the Communist in the 1950s to encourage literacy, as traditional Chinese was considered too difficult to master for general public. Hence it would be more accurate to use traditional Chinese in your video to represent the long history of Chinese
That was so amazing does anyone knows a book a book witch talks about these kind of things?
True is a cognate of the German word "treu", meaning faithful or loyal. Faithful to reality literally translates to "realitätsgetreu" or "wirklichkeitsgetreu" but these terms are mostly used to describe naturalistic paintings, sculptures, miniature models and the like. I assume the relevant meaning here was rather "wahrheitsgetreu" (faithful to [the] truth), which is obviously more or less just a fancy way of saying "wahr" (true). Circle closed!
So is a true friend the same as "ein treuer Freund"? Yes and no. The accurate translation of a true friend is "ein wahrer Freund" whilst "ein treuer Freund" is a loyal friend -- but since an illoyal friend isn't really a true friend, this distinguation is rather redundant. Of course loyalty should be kept within reasonable borders. As a German I'm aware of the problem caused by unlimited loyalty (in German: "grenzenlose Loyalität" or "unerschütterliche Treue"), with "unerschütterlich" actually meaning unshakeable or steadfast, leading back to the property of that massive tree that made up the root of the word true.
In the same way that regal and royal are more or less the same, one coming directly from Latin, the other one taking the detour through French, legal and loyal are also cognates of one another, although their meanings have diverged significantly. The German word for legal is "gesetzestreu" (faithful to the law), a word of course that nobody in Germany ever uses... or do they?
That was beautiful.
Mind blowing.
3:10, squirrel's like, "You talkin' bout me?"
In Medieval literature trees and long amounts of time are both martial images. It’s interesting that in our language the same connections exist but under different origins. Perhaps there is such a thing as universal imagery or even a universal language which once existed before branching off into the languages of today?
beautiful!
This is super interesting.
I'm pretty sure the narrator's name wasn't Gina...
haha
ThickBeet name suggest who wrote the article
i'm pretty sure you didn't see the credit... lol
Yeah it's Addison Anderson
Wonderful!
Thanks!
magnificent truth !
Isn't this the point of the "Mysteries of the Vernacular" series? Just wondering why they made this a separate video.
I tought that too for a moment, but then I thought if this Gina Cooke wants to make a cool lesson about the word 'true', TED-Ed would be more than happy to put it online.
The Mysteries of Vernacular is its own series that TED shares, but this video is a TED original. Also, the MoV films illustrate the etymology of a single word, whereas this video goes a little farther by illustrating the relationships between the histories of two words.
real good analogy
Damn, "true" is deep.
Is there an academic research area focused solely on finding the word roots? I find the business extremely interesting :))
Hi Addison Anderson ^_^
You are great narrator...
Truth must be the tree which a true system has to be consistent like a tree.
Amazing
This video is "truly" amazing. ;).
We humans are always looking for the truth.
It was good up to about 2:40, when the connection to "tree" was mentioned. After that it was just rambling on about trees.
Funny, I found that to be the most interesting part. It just shows how ancient people had a very limited vocabulary compared to modern languages. They had to rely on one word where we now have many, and so they had to make these connections and associations using the few words they did have. I find that fascinating, and obviously a different truth than what you got from watching.
You are extremely unlearned. You should really study etymology so you don't come across as a clown.
What etymological info was there after 2:40?
Cool, I didn't know most of this!
Brad purnell is a genius. So are trees
I kind of hoped this would debunk what most people think it means for something to be true. But it was entertaining nevertheless, and it was alluded to I guess.
+jackdawcaw What do you mean?
Yeah, I thought it was gonna be something philosophical haha
I was hoping for that as well. We all need a new definition of 'truth' after surviving this election cycle. Seems to me that truth is so much more malleable than I had thought, mostly due to one's perspective, but still, even the facts seem relative these days.
The video predates this election and its author never imagined such a thing.
in greek the oak is "drys" I wonder if this connects somehow to the word tree or the Druids because the resemblance is strikening
loved it!
The word druid doesn't share a common origin with E. tree nor G. δρῦς "oak tree", it is an erroneous folk etymology which can be traced back to a definite Classical source, due to similarity of the words' transliterated appearances or spellings. Druid ("prophet", or more accurately "seer") is actually *dru-vid with the first element putting emphasis to the second core stem vid- and very comparable to toponyms like Drunemeton. The second element derived from the same root with PIE *weyd- "to see", and is a sibling with L. videre "to see", and hence the meaning "to know, comprehend and understand". Interestingly, the meanings of "to see/vision" and "know/kenning" tend to intertwine with each other, not only in Indo-European languages but also in other languages, from daily conversations like "I see" meaning "I know/understand", and in French savoir and voir have similar morphology in modern stage, though in earlier Latin stage their origins were sapere and videre respectively.
Perfect
mysteries in vernacular indeed
props to the art person for that 5000 year old tree
"A single word can tell a story" Ted-ED the true story of 'true' - Gina Cooke
Tell me about it, I'm learning Japanese and a lot of Kanji have radicals (parts of the drawing) which can have meaning within the written word itself and combine with other kanji to mean a multitude of things. You can infer a lot of origins of kanji within the meaning word itself.
Why does the outro have no audio? Am I the only one noticing it?
Tree or Falls?
A tree falls the way it leans.... is a quote from the Lorax. Which came out in 2012...
Who else is watching this for online school?
AHMAZZINGGG!
THIS IS SO FREAKING COOL
Lovely :)
no mention of Buddha and the Bodhi tree though?
because you can only discern what is true with your eyes and hands
well thats not entirely true. its only your perception of what your hands and eyes are telling you that they "feel" or "see" and that is all different what if u have burns on your hands or astigmatism in your eyes, perhaps something else that alters their "perception" of your surrounding. tiss all up to philosophy.
no shit? also the the simple act of observing a quantum mechanical object changes it. when matter meets mind, matter changes.
flanfan1212 Well, that's just a theory so you might not want to go around proclaiming it as though it were fact.
It's beautifully true
This made me think of Weirwoods in A Song of Ice and Fire
That was sooooo TRUE
Marvelous. Truly :P
What is the name of the profession that studies this kind of stuff? I'm interested in this same topic but in french language