Share Your World 2020:29 June


Questions:

Must we have evidence to know the truth?

If we are talking about legal matters, most certainly. You can’t just convict someone of a crime because you believe they did it. In science too, you need evidence to confirm a theory. Otherwise we’d all be injecting ourselves with bleach. Of course just because there is evidence of something does not necessarily mean that people will believe it. That’s why we still have climate change deniers, anti vaxers and Donald Trump. People of faith may feel that they don’t need evidence of their God’s existence although the Bible is full of stories of folk asking for proof.

Photo by Anna Shvets on Pexels.com

How much control does a person have over their life?

I’d say that varies. Babies and children have none, people in many countries who live with war and poverty have very little. I guess that the richer a person is the more control they have over matters like, work, where to live, travel, how many children they have etc. The rest of us, if we are lucky, at least have control over our own choices in life as far as our personal and financial circumstances allow us to.

What is gravity and how does it work?

To me gravity is what keeps us all from flying off the earth like kids falling off a playground roundabout. I cheated a bit here. NASA Science for kids says this.

gravity: an invisible force that pulls objects toward each other. Earth’s gravity is what keeps you on the ground and what makes things fall. … So, the closer objects are to each other, the stronger their gravitational pull is. Earth’s gravity comes from all its mass.

https://spaceplace.nasa.gov/what-is-gravity/en/

Tift Park merry-go-round.JPG
By Michael RiveraOwn work, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link

Can a person be happy if they have never experienced sadness?  How about vice versa?

I suppose you can measure happiness or sadness by looking at the people around you as well as your own experiences. Perhaps the question is really can you appreciate happiness if you have never been sad? If a person was always sad would the absence of sadness be happiness to them?

Gratitude

As always I’m grateful for the small things in life. Naomi came up to visit last weekend and we went to Wynyard, our nearest town to do some errands. We laughed a lot because it took us so long to find things we thought would be easy to find. We browsed in our favourite secondhand shop which has re-opened and we had some really good burgers for lunch.

Food was a good part of the past week. I was given a breadmaker last week and have enjoyed using it to bake some bread. Naomi made scones in the downstairs kitchen. We were so pleased the retro oven down there works properly. I made ginger biscuits and we treated ourselves to pizza from the local shop on Saturday night. Yes, it had pineapple on it.

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Taswegian1957

I was born in England in 1957 and lived there until our family came to Australia in 1966. I grew up in Adelaide, South Australia, where I met and married my husband, David. We came together over a mutual love of trains. Both of us worked for the railways for many years, his job was with Australian National Railways, while I spent 12 years working for the STA, later TransAdelaide the Adelaide city transit system. After leaving that job I worked in hospitality until 2008. We moved to Tasmania in 2002 to live in the beautiful Huon Valley. In 2015 David became ill and passed away in October of that year. I currently co-write two blogs on WordPress.com with my sister Naomi. Our doll blog "Dolls, Dolls, Dolls", and "Our Other Blog" which is about everything else but with a focus on photographs and places in Tasmania. In November 2019 I began a new life in the house that Naomi and I intend to make our retirement home at Sisters Beach in Tasmania's northwest. Currently we have five pets between us. Naomi's two dogs Toby and Teddy and cats, Tigerwoods and Panther and my cat Polly. My dog Cindy passed away aged 16 in April 2022.

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