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Wednesday 04 December 2024 05:03:11 GMT
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no1companyinterior
Doan Thạch :
cho em số điện thoại em đặt hàng
2025-01-06 22:46:48
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dydvt0n5m6sw
Thích Ăn Cướp :
🥰🥰🥰
2024-12-23 08:16:27
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dydvt0n5m6sw
Thích Ăn Cướp :
😁😁😁
2024-12-23 08:16:27
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thanhliemno1
Thanh Liêm 🇻🇳🇹🇼 :
🥰🥰🥰
2024-12-04 12:14:06
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The writer Robert Hanlon once said, 'Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.' This has come to be known as Hanlon's Razor. The basic idea is that it actually takes talent to be truly evil — to mastermind a cunning plot and give James Bond a run for his money takes wits. Which means that when things go wrong, or if some harm is being done to you, it's far more likely that it's done from incompetence, neglect, and idiocy than any cruel intentions. Let's say somebody cuts you up on the road. They slide into your lane barely an inch away from a crash. And so you hit your steering wheel, you honk your horn, and you swear like a sailor. 'How could they do this to me?' What's far more likely is that person actually just made a mistake, and they are just as anxious as you were at the near crash. But they're also panicking now because the person behind them is swearing and honking their horn. Hanlon's Razor echoes a long philosophical tradition. St. Augustine, for example, argued that ignorance, and not intentions, were the root of most sin. And the Stoics, like Epictetus, warned us not to judge appearances too quickly. It was misunderstanding, not malevolence, that's often the culprit. Hanlon's Razor is a good rule of thumb. If somebody gets your drink order wrong, it's probably not personal. If somebody forgets to copy you into an email, it's probably from forgetfulness, and not from spite. Most people, most of the time, are not out to get you — but that doesn't mean their foolishness will not hurt.
The writer Robert Hanlon once said, 'Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.' This has come to be known as Hanlon's Razor. The basic idea is that it actually takes talent to be truly evil — to mastermind a cunning plot and give James Bond a run for his money takes wits. Which means that when things go wrong, or if some harm is being done to you, it's far more likely that it's done from incompetence, neglect, and idiocy than any cruel intentions. Let's say somebody cuts you up on the road. They slide into your lane barely an inch away from a crash. And so you hit your steering wheel, you honk your horn, and you swear like a sailor. 'How could they do this to me?' What's far more likely is that person actually just made a mistake, and they are just as anxious as you were at the near crash. But they're also panicking now because the person behind them is swearing and honking their horn. Hanlon's Razor echoes a long philosophical tradition. St. Augustine, for example, argued that ignorance, and not intentions, were the root of most sin. And the Stoics, like Epictetus, warned us not to judge appearances too quickly. It was misunderstanding, not malevolence, that's often the culprit. Hanlon's Razor is a good rule of thumb. If somebody gets your drink order wrong, it's probably not personal. If somebody forgets to copy you into an email, it's probably from forgetfulness, and not from spite. Most people, most of the time, are not out to get you — but that doesn't mean their foolishness will not hurt.

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