Tuesday, July 20, 2010

How can teens find the truth?

How can teens relate to the idea about finding truth, ensuring loyalty, acquiring knowledge, and preventing skepticism? For instance adults can find out the truth about politicans to decide whether or not to vote for them. How can teens relate to this idea?

How can teens find the truth?
by questioning things or reading on them to create an understanding an opinion of what it is they need to find truth about.
Reply:Read.
Reply:When it comes to politicians, nobody really knows the


truth as they present only their good sides to encourage


voters to vote for them. In this case, skepticism is wise.


The best way of ensuring loyalty is to be loyal yourself.


Aquiring knowledge will come as the momentum of


your life unfolds. Keep your eyes and ears open. Be


curious, read everything you can get your hands on


and have open discussions amoung your peers and


adults in these matters. Everyone will have a different


approach and opinion.....but truths have a way of


lingering in your mind long after they are voiced.
Reply:I'm a teen and I know the truth..........
Reply:Wow,


i like this question.





Well, I find truth by learning from my mistakes.


And I believe that the best way is to learn from mistakes.


There won't be a class for "learning" the "truth"





And i don't quite understand your question.





is it generally asking how do teens find the truth or how can teens find the truth about politicians.








well, ther is votesmart. which's website is www.votesmart.org if that's what you're talking about.
Reply:The Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement is so beneficial that it can very easily counteract the contamination of material nature, which results from one's possessing a material body. Bhagavad-gītā therefore teaches, in the very beginning, that whether one is a man or a woman, one must know that he or she is not the body but a spiritual soul. Everyone should be interested in the activities of the spirit soul, not the body. As long as one is activated by the bodily conception of life, there is always the danger of being misled, whether one is a man or a woman. The soul is sometimes described as puruṣa because whether one is dressed as a man or a woman, one is inclined to enjoy this material world. One who has this spirit of enjoyment is described as puruṣa. Whether one is a man or a woman, he is not interested in serving others; everyone is interested in satisfying his or her own senses. Kṛṣṇa consciousness, however, provides first-class training for a man or a woman. A man should be trained to be a first-class devotee of Lord Kṛṣṇa, and a woman should be trained to be a very chaste follower of her husband. That will make the lives of both of them happy.





www.krishna.com
Reply:We just have to open our eyes.
Reply:I'm a teenager, and I believe that I've found the truth. Meanwhile, though, there are many people in my grade or even older who know little about the truth of life because they are simply too lazy to find anything out for themselves.





Also, many adults don't know the truth about politics. It's been said in surveys that teenagers know more about political lies than most adults do. So, just to put that out there.


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