There are often two sides of the story
9 years ago by wubwub · 2840 Likes · 14 comments · Popular
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purple_sleevies
· 9 years ago
· FIRST
This needs to be shared everywhere
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japester
· 9 years ago
Based on the cylinder the red shadow looks like it should be longer than it is taller but it isn't so that shadow looks weird like it's been rotated 90 degrees. I don't think the red shadow is the Truth, I think it's a Lie! Now I'm confused as to what this is trying to teach me.
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guest
· 9 years ago
Both are true. The truth is always based on perception, ones freedom fighter is another ones terrorist. It is supposed to show that you should take the other ones perception into consideration before talking/writing. It also tries to portray that there is no absolute truth.
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ridelong
· 9 years ago
Dear high schools everywhere, teach this. Now.
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deleted
· 9 years ago
Wait...what?
garlog
· 9 years ago
There are often many sides to a story. Some are true, some are false. This picture means nothing.
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deleted
· 9 years ago
The picture is showing that both sides of the story are true, but both separately do not show the whole story, or the full truth. This picture does have a meaning, but you have to really think about itans what it means to be able to see it.
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garlog
· 9 years ago
It's too simplified to be useful.
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guest
· 9 years ago
Sure, it is rather simple. Still, ist is enough to get people start thinking.
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garlog
· 9 years ago
I'll give you that.
guest
· 9 years ago
I don't enjoy thinking before typing, so no
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guest
· 9 years ago
lie would be telling you there is a floating marshmallow inside a box with no top. But you can see it..
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smitty
· 9 years ago
While this is a powerful message, the first thing I thought of was quantum indeterminacy and higher dimensions.
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bobbob
· 9 years ago
The message is everyone sees truth differently. These illustrations always leave out the fact that there's a third party seeing all of it at once.
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