Author Posts

November 21, 2016 at 11:59 am

Know what you are talking about before you speak, and give attention to your health before you get sick. Examine your conscience  before the Lord judges you; then when that time comes, he will forgive you. Humble yourself before you are punished with sickness. When you have sinned. Show repentance. If you make a promise to the Lord, keep it as long as you can. Don’t wait until you are about ro die to set things straight. But before you make such promise, be prepared to keep it. Don’t try to test the Lord’s patience. Think! Do you want him to angry with you on day you die? When you face his judgement, do you want him to turn his back on you? When you have all you want, think what is it like to be hungry, what is it like to be poor. Things can change in single day, the Lord can act very quickly. If you are wise,  you will be careful in everything you do. When evil is all around you, be especially careful that you do not become guilty. Every intelligent person can recognize wisdom and will honour anyone who shows it. If you appreciate wisdom when you hear it, you will become wise yourself, and your words will be a sourse of wisdom for others.

Do you love wisdom and her gifts? Many people today in our society are misusing their own God given, when you have wisdom you have everything you needed in life because wisdom will introduced you to the public, when you have wisdom, wisdom will keep you away from trouble everyone want to be wise, self-examination

November 21, 2016 at 3:03 pm

My brother I say that introspection means that the examination or observation of one’s own mental and emotional processes.  Introspection is a process that generates, or is aimed at generating, knowledge, judgments, or beliefs about mental events, states, or processes, and not about affairs outside one’s mind

Any process that in a similar manner generates knowledge of one’s own and others’ minds is by that token not an introspective process. (Some philosophers have contemplated peculiar or science fiction cases in which we might introspect the contents of others’ minds directly

The two most commonly cited classes of introspectible mental states are attitudes, such as beliefs, desires, evaluations, and intentions, and conscious experiences, such as emotions, images, and sensory experiences.

Most philosophers hold that introspection yields something like beliefs or judgments about one’s own mind, but others prefer to characterize the products of introspection as “thoughts”, “representations”, “awareness”, or the like.