while taking a quick look at my bookshelves i realized how a single topic can evoke so many different approaches - even colliding against eachother. it's funny how the human mind can rearrange ideas in such a way that even facts are subject to fantasy and history to perspective. so how trustworthy are our historical notions? (i.e. "second-hand" knowledge; passed on and not empirical)
take this for example: from the 3rd to the 16th century, the dominant view held that the earth was the rotational center of the universe. this theory came to be by aristotle and only centuries after dismantled into what we now know as heliocentrism - a completely different model.
so knowledge can be imo, for the most part, a matter of perspective and opportunity rather than fact (or at least the observable fact). although my memory is not the most accurate i recall j.krishnamurti saying that the only knowledge you can acquire by reading - let's say - freud is the comprehension of freud himself and nothing beyond.
on the other hand, all these embedded modern cultural values, religious dogma and just about everything else that diminishes the individual mind into pattern-like thought creates a model in which knowledge like this can appeal to mostly everyone.
so how certain can knowledge really be if it is limited by condition, perception and comprehension?
thanks for reading and sorry for my rusty english, hope you can share your own insights too
"..undisturbed by order, chaos creates balance. it is not the artifical balance of scales and weights, but the lively, ever-changing balance of a wild and beautiful dance. it is wonderful; it is magickal. it is beyond any definition, and every attempt to describe it can only be a metaphor that never comes near to its true beauty or erotic energy."
"the angel is free because of his knowledge, the beast because of his ignorance. between the two remains the son of man to struggle."