We all have innate knowledge; because when we are a newborn baby, we automatically learn something in our own way. Without any help or any teach about our family. Emotion is the one of our innate knowledge. Because when we are only a newborn baby, we automatically know how to express an emotion. An emotion that we apply until the end of our lives. And an emotion that we cannot control if we feel something. Another innate knowledge that we do after our mother giving birth to us is to digest milk and food. For me emotion and digesting food are one of the innate knowledge that we learn automatically. At first we cannot live longer if we did not know how to digest milk/food. And we cannot show to other people if we are happy or sad when we did not show an emotion. Reality is the actual thing that appears in our five senses. Everything that we can see, touch, smell and taste. We realize that this is reality if we try something and if we encounter something new. Reality was based on our everyday life, because of our five senses we feel that is real, we know that we are in a true world and we know that we are in a reality. Sometimes we expect something that is too hard to happen and it has been just an imagination. And when the day comes that we expect something to happen, but it all just an imagination so in that …show more content…
You know why? Because in our world, there is a permanent. Permanent in love to our family and to our special loved ones. Are loving our family is forever because we all know that what ever happen to us, we keep holding them and they hold us back and when we love them even if we did not show it to them they loving us always and forever. And I believe also there is a forever to our special love ones. Because for me if you truly her you will do anything and you can give her a true love. Because we all know that if we truly love someone we did not allow them to leave us alone because we did not know how to do if they leave us
When discussing reality, several questions emerge regarding what reality is. A reality, "the real situation that exist," (Merriam-Webster.com) consists of two forms-perceived reality and actual reality. One spends his or her entire life trying to decipher the difference between the two forms; yet to truly understand reality, it is essential that you comprehend both. Plato 's "Allegory of the Cave," Dick Gregory 's "Shame" and Frederick Douglass ' "Learning to Read and Write" illustrate examples of both perceptions. Furthermore, how conceptualization of reality helps establish who one will become.
The ability to identify emotion and carry it out into one’s daily life is what defines an individual as human; if one lacks emotion, then the individual will become a robot of society. Emotion is defined as a natural instinctive state of mind deriving from one’s circumstances, mood, or relationships with others
Is perception reality or is it an allusion and stereotype of those around us? Perception roots from your're personally raised to view life. From the time were children until we're old enough to raise our own. Those around us influence our perception. Perception can come from personal experience, or the opinions of others. It's always good to keep an open mind in every situation.
Have you ever thought you heard something, but there was nothing there? Have you ever thought you saw someone in the corner of your eye, and when you looked there was no person there? When we look down from a high building on people, do they appear small like ants? Aren't there thousands of occasions when we do misperceive? What is reality and perception? Mainstream science describes reality as "the state of things as they actually exist". So reality is simply: everything we observe. Perception is the process by which organisms interpret and organize sensation to produce a meaningful experience of the world (sapdesignguild.org np). I believe people should base some decisions
Emotions are used in our everyday lives help us understand and comprehend a situation. The way we feel can affect the way we think through a situation and the situation that we make. Our emotions are expressed when we play sports, when a loved one dies, or when we see our newly born baby for the first time. Emotions are a state of consciousness like joy, sorrow, fear, hate, and love. Whenever we are presented with a situation, our brain responds in feelings, and our feeling determine what will happen next.
The first type of reality, objective reality, is the world around us and how it works. It just is. The second type, subjective,
Christakis and Fowler suggest that emotions most likely began in early human evolutionary stages to promote the bonding of mother and child; later expanding to other family members, then non family members. The ability to read moods and pass them onto each other could have aided early humans in their everyday activities, due to the lack of fully developed verbal communication. It is also stated, emotions travel faster than words. It is faster to read an individual’s face to understand their emotions than it is to wait for the verbal communication that comes along with it; which leads into what the authors call Emotional
In broader terms, Reality is the state of things as they actually exist, rather than as they may appear or might be imagined. In a wider definition, reality includes everything that is and has been, whether or not it is observable or comprehensible. A still broader definition includes everything that has existed, exists, or will exist. Reality can be defined in a way that links it to world views or parts of them (conceptual frameworks): Reality is the totality of all things, structures (actual and conceptual), events (past and present) and phenomena, whether observable or not. It is what a world view (whether it be based on individual or shared human experience) ultimately attempts to describe or map.
Perception is the way in which we view reality, ourselves, others and the world around us. The reality is the real state of things. In fact, it is how things are, whether we perceive them to be or not. Perceptions are based on experience and then experience leads to belief. Most feel their beliefs are true, however, all they have is their perception. Perception comes from how they choose to describe their experiences, or how they have been taught to understand them. Truth does not always come from experience; it comes from facts and
According to the accumulated definitions from the movies “Inception” and “The Matrix”, and Ken Kesey’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, reality is only what the user perceives as true. This notion of reality is the one our stories tell of, the “true reality” that protagonists search for. That is to say there are multiple forms of reality (and the subforms they take, especially
Reality can be two different things, objective and subjective. Objective reality is what is truly real. This is formed by the facts and truths of the world. Reality for people can be what they experience the world to be. This is subjective reality.
Reality is the state of being aware, aware of objects, events and time itself but the way people perceive it differs from being to being. If reality was something everyone was able to perceive and agree on one then, maybe there would be an actual definition for the word reality. “Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.” – Albert Einstein. Reality is indeed an illusion like Albert Einstein has stated and it is also very persistent because everyday in life one must make one’s own reality due to own reasoning and beliefs. As people face life and traumatic events they warp their reality to comfort themselves. Throughout Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper, Flannery O'Connor A Good Man is Hard to Find, William Faulkner A Rose for Emily and F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby, the characters themselves form a reality that only they can perceive, influencing and altering what reality itself is. As the characters in the novels go through events the way that one perceives reality can easily be
Knowledge and instinct. One is learned and the other is embedded into you from birth. They play two major roles in the story “To Build a Fire” by Jack London. The story is about a man and his dog, who decide to go on a trip through a Yukon trail so the man can visit his friends. The dog’s knowledge told him that it wasn’t safe but, the man’s instinct kept them going.
There is no single, true universal reality. What is real and true varies from individual to individual, in light of one's own thoughts, conditions, and learning. Through many year and over time many people have tried to take a hold on reality and alternate realities as well, on top of that they also had to deal with the facts of identity. In the movie 41 by Glenn Triggs, the fact of reality is altered by the view of time travel and it take a new perspective on reality and identity. This could be also compared to philosophers like Rene Descarte and David Hume, who put their point of view into what reality could really be and what it could really mean.
Reality is an idea. It is something that man invented like intelligence or love. Reality is our perception of where we are in our lives at that moment. That concludes that our perception of reality is subject to change, for our lives change. Some people like to take drugs to distort their experience of life. These drugs bring on a euphoric state of mind that most people believe is true reality. Many drugs are addicting, but that isn’t the reason why people take them. They are merely addicted to the effects drugs play on their brain. They get caught in a circle of depression, addiction, and drugs. These people create their own world through the physical and emotional