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Oriental Wisdom

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"T’sao Chan usually keeps silent and writes down everything that happens around him. When asked why or what for he takes so many notes, he says he likes to mix, spread, and share the peculiarities of people who believe the world has physical, political, or cultural borders, be...

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Oriental Wisdom

"T’sao Chan usually keeps silent and writes down everything that happens around him. When asked why or what for he takes so many notes, he says he likes to mix, spread, and share the peculiarities of people who believe the world has physical, political, or cultural borders, because nothing pleases him more than tearing down the only borders that separated humans from each other: mental borders. Light comes from the East; to know oneself is to know others, just as it is to love oneself, forgive oneself, and enrich oneself internally, and while we are in this world, which can seem terrible in many aspects, there is always the possibility and the opportunity to take a step towards a better humanity.
Does wisdom have specific cardinal points?
T’sao Chan thinks not, and he intends for anyone who reads his texts to broaden the scope of their consciousness and thus understand it, uniting the four parts of the world on a single path, that of knowledge.
"


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"T’sao Chan usually keeps silent and writes down everything that happens around him. When asked why or what for he takes so many notes, he says he likes to mix, spread, and share the peculiarities of people who believe the world has physical, political, or cultural borders, because nothing pleases him more than tearing down the only borders that separated humans from each other: mental borders. Light comes from the East; to know oneself is to know others, just as it is to love oneself, forgive oneself, and enrich oneself internally, and while we are in this world, which can seem terrible in many aspects, there is always the possibility and the opportunity to take a step towards a better humanity.
Does wisdom have specific cardinal points?
T’sao Chan thinks not, and he intends for anyone who reads his texts to broaden the scope of their consciousness and thus understand it, uniting the four parts of the world on a single path, that of knowledge.
"

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