"I love peace very much, but I can't stand the idea of invading Earth from Andromeda." - I have a very geographically extended sense of inner circle.
My father, who was in the trucking business before the 1970s, transported the movie dealers to the countryside of Korea, where there were no movie theaters, and received transportation costs. Movie dealers used to set up large tents at night and screen noir films featuring monster movies or Macau or Hong Kong as backgrounds, which were welcomed as a precious moment for rural people to access outside culture in the days when there was no TV. However, young people who imagined trucks carrying movie dealers as outside aggression gathered to throw stones and resist. My father, who was active between the two Koreas and went bankrupt while doing pollack trade in Manchuria, laughed a lot while recalling the incident.
The military coup in Myanmar is said to have played a major role in the long-established inner circle of soldiers. They are said to have formed a different world by strengthening the internal exchanges of military groups rather than external exchanges. China's nationalism, which has become a problem these days, should also be seen as a much more internalized consciousness than I thought of being wary of Andromeda's invasion.
In Korea, the inner circle consciousness of prosecutors and religions has been a major problem, and inner circle consciousness hinders social development as a non-modern way of thinking. Inner circle is likely to define an externality that inevitably conflicts with the interests of the group. Therefore, it should be considered inevitable to cause conflict with the outside world.
The first military coup, led by South Korean Major General Park Chung-hee, had a justification for reforming the external society and actually demonstrated some ability in economic development. Therefore, the evaluation of the coup is still divided between good and bad. However, Major General Chun Doo-hwan's second military coup is considered an unjustifiable and despicable incident led by an inner circle called "Hanahoe."
The following is a remark made by Max Plank in a conversation between Werner Karl Heisenberg (1901–1976), a German scientist who established the basis of quantum mechanics, and Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck (1858–1947), who criticized Hitler's oppression of Jews.
I have repeatedly explained that they are Germans and that most of them, like all other Germans, were people who sacrificed their lives for Germany in the last war, but I did not seek any understanding from Hitler. To put it a little bit worse, it would be an accurate expression that there was no language of conversation with such a human being to understand each other. It seemed to me that he was now clearly cut off from contact with the outside world and felt that it was all cumbersome and annoying when someone said anything.
I don't know the original, but it was published 40 years ago under the title "Part and All" in Korean. I read it when I was in the third grade of high school when I was in a hurry to study, and it seemed to have helped me a lot to have a holistic view. We live in an era of advanced transportation and communication, and some countries have a fairly strong inner circle consciousness while sending spacecraft to Mars. What I'm saying now is a funny story, but it's time for everyone to unite in preparation for Andromeda's invasion. I'm always worried that my vision is getting narrower while saying this.
댓글 없음:
댓글 쓰기