TO BE OR NOT TO BE or TO DO OR NOT TO DO are phrases used in a philosophical sense especially when a person is deliberating on a project or a ventrue or to arive at a decision and the ways and means to accomplish that project or to become succesful in the venture or to reach an unmistakable decision. Though these utterances may be pleasing to the maker, the listner or the recipient would have to treat these statements in the environs that compelled him to deliberate about the project or venture or the factors to be considered for arriving at decision.This only means that any activity would inovlove commissions and omissions in one way or the other. In general parlance, the precept of Commission cannotes doing of an act in a positive manner and in the positive sense while Ommisssion refers to the absence of doing an act to avoid the result which is in his thoughtsa. Though these are the general attributes of the phrase used, in reality and in practice at times commission of an act is necessary to produce a negztive result while ommisssion is equally necessary to create a positive result. Numerous instances exist on this score whern one';s life activities are scannned through. Thus commissions and omissions done by a person cannot said to be static always in the context of the results but only dependent on the environs in which thedoer of theact is placed and the circumstaces that enabled him to deliberate on the lines dawned on him. It is, therefore, incumbent on the recipient of a statement to think aloud about the philosophical phrases referred.. However the underlying rationale of these phrases should not be undermined as these phrases carry the semantics that a person should not be indecisive when he is called upon to perform an act and as such indecisuveness will not enable a person to move forward to make a judicious decision. All said and done, one does an act hoping against hope while taking a decision based on belief and such belief is nothing but trut and truth alone held in mind..
Sunday, 2 December 2012
COMMISSIO9NS AND OMISSIONS
TO BE OR NOT TO BE or TO DO OR NOT TO DO are phrases used in a philosophical sense especially when a person is deliberating on a project or a ventrue or to arive at a decision and the ways and means to accomplish that project or to become succesful in the venture or to reach an unmistakable decision. Though these utterances may be pleasing to the maker, the listner or the recipient would have to treat these statements in the environs that compelled him to deliberate about the project or venture or the factors to be considered for arriving at decision.This only means that any activity would inovlove commissions and omissions in one way or the other. In general parlance, the precept of Commission cannotes doing of an act in a positive manner and in the positive sense while Ommisssion refers to the absence of doing an act to avoid the result which is in his thoughtsa. Though these are the general attributes of the phrase used, in reality and in practice at times commission of an act is necessary to produce a negztive result while ommisssion is equally necessary to create a positive result. Numerous instances exist on this score whern one';s life activities are scannned through. Thus commissions and omissions done by a person cannot said to be static always in the context of the results but only dependent on the environs in which thedoer of theact is placed and the circumstaces that enabled him to deliberate on the lines dawned on him. It is, therefore, incumbent on the recipient of a statement to think aloud about the philosophical phrases referred.. However the underlying rationale of these phrases should not be undermined as these phrases carry the semantics that a person should not be indecisive when he is called upon to perform an act and as such indecisuveness will not enable a person to move forward to make a judicious decision. All said and done, one does an act hoping against hope while taking a decision based on belief and such belief is nothing but trut and truth alone held in mind..
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