English, asked by bg3523637, 3 months ago

write a note on limits, perplexities and growth of English language​

Answers

Answered by MsLioNess14
0

\huge \dag { \underline{ \boxed{ \purple{ \mathfrak{answer}}}}}

English is a language built on a foundation of opposition. This can result in unique mental dysfunction for native English speakers. [I know whereof I speak.] First among them is our profound fixation on judgement. Everything is black and white in a mind that thinks constantly in polarized English words. As a culture, we are close to losing the capacity for subtlety.

In reality, opposites are complementary. This nondual vision is known to the East and to some extent in Western culture. Yet, its simplicity is often its cause for dismissal by minds desiring complication. Not to fault the mind; the mind’s job is to measure and to divide input into little bits it “thinks” it understands. However, it does further to put the tool down when not in use. Human thought is not the speed limit of consciousness we think.

Repeated thoughts cut grooves in our neural net as physical and solid as a vinyl LP. A record that can play of its own accord once you lay down the tracks in your brain. Have you heard the loop? We often play the same pattern, the same old song over and over. Pretty or painful, it does not matter because while lost in the thrall of that old song — we miss now.

Based on my experience, some languages seem to take less of a mental toll on their native speakers than English. Yet in recent travels, I see deterioration of local ancient principles of unity and polarization of thought even in remote corners of the world. English has invaded as surely and relentlessly as kudzu.

The entirety of existence is a great mystery beyond any of our immaterial human definitions, labels, limits and morals. This knowing defeats the undisciplined mind’s very reason to exist and that is not acceptable to mind.

Explanation:

Hope it would help you!!

Answered by simreensaini
2

English is a language built on a foundation of opposition. This can result in unique mental dysfunction for native English speakers. [I know whereof I speak.] First among them is our profound fixation on judgement. Everything is black and white in a mind that thinks constantly in polarized English words. As a culture, we are close to losing the capacity for subtlety.

In reality, opposites are complementary. This nondual vision is known to the East and to some extent in Western culture. Yet, its simplicity is often its cause for dismissal by minds desiring complication. Not to fault the mind; the mind’s job is to measure and to divide input into little bits it “thinks” it understands. However, it does further to put the tool down when not in use. Human thought is not the speed limit of consciousness we think.

Similar questions