@philomyu: I’m an adult myself, so I’m careful not to get into what we call problems caused by the elderly (esp. gerontocracy, and elderly people’s control over the young). I’m also an adult, so I try not to get into what people call problems caused by the elderly (esp. gerontocracy, and elderly people’s control over the young), but I wonder if that could be explained by a mechanism like “Abrasion of curiosity”. I wonder if it can be explained by a mechanism like “Abrasion of curiosity”. I wonder if it could be explained by a mechanism like “Abrasion of curiosity”, in which you become unimpressed with new ideas that you found interesting when you were younger, or you feel that you are being rejected for not understanding their interest.

I think this “New Ideas” is important as the borderline between becoming an old person and not becoming an old person, and I want to be careful because I think that if I only take on young people who tend to tell me “stories that Reinforces prejudice” or “stories that give new authority to my theory” no matter how much I think I am inputting information by talking to young people, I will end up becoming an old person. I want to be careful not to take up with young people who tend to give “stories that Reinforces prejudice” or “stories that give new authority to one’s own theory”.


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