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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Learning
Transcript
00:00Did you like the gift, my love?
00:03This is the gift of our marriage
00:04This is a problem, Manar.
00:06Yes, but not just any grudge.
00:08This is the suggestion that will ruin our marriage
00:10Is our passport missing?
00:11Why, my love?
00:13Our marriage is perfect, isn't it?
00:14Yes
00:14What is this?
00:16This thing is electrifying
00:16This is Chinese lichen
00:17It reveals the dwarf
00:19But I wasn't lying when I said our marriage is like
00:20Yes
00:22Yes
00:22It's okay, Heesam
00:24Zina is like any other two
00:25They need to work on themselves
00:27I don't need to work on anything.
00:29Yes
00:30Hey, how do you solve this?
00:31Could you please be kind?
00:32Serbs recommended it to me
00:34So that our relationship can be more transparent
00:36We improved our relationship
00:38Am I free?
00:39Tell me then
00:40Where were you out last night?
00:42With the youth
00:43Yes
00:43With Noor
00:45Noor?
00:46Nour is one of my friend
00:47Yes
00:47One, my friend
00:49We were doing work
00:50With Lee Aoi
00:51What kind of job?
00:52Oh, my work year
00:52Ali Awi
00:53Are you fat?
00:54Manar
00:55Betrayal is a concept
00:55very elastic
00:56Yes
00:57I can't believe it
00:58The length of time
00:59I was living with a thief
01:01What is this?
01:02Is he even allowed to coexist with us here?
01:03Hisam
01:04My love
01:05There are black books
01:06And in it are written eggs
01:07And you call that betrayal?
01:09Egg books?
01:10And it's a bit of pure hatred
01:12Don't forget, one
01:14Do you understand that you're not lying?
01:16No, of course not.
01:16Yes
01:17Yes
01:17This glam is so sweet
01:19You man, you're asking her with magic?
01:20On the magic movie
01:22Tell me, Manar
01:24What are you attracted to her for?
01:26I'm lying to you
01:26Every day, Jesus
01:28yeah
01:29No scandals, come out
01:30I'll attract you
01:31And I'm telling you that I'm happy
01:33I'll attract you
01:35And I'm telling you that I'm like Jesus
01:36I'll attract you
01:38If I told you I hate you
01:39until
01:40When I found out you were cheating on me
01:44Oh, Manar
01:46You were carrying all of this inside and kept quiet
01:49I've been tiring and wronging you all these years.
01:53I promise you, starting today
01:56There's no lying
01:58I promise you
01:59Come on, Fact Z
02:09Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you.
02:10When there is a new episode
02:11From the Al-Daheeh program
02:12The boy wasn't from the Al-Daheeh program.
02:13I was going to ask you
02:14The hysterical one appeared
02:15Dear beautiful viewer, let me take you by the hand.
02:17We look at America in 2001
02:18Malich Ya Bahmoud, this year is all I have left
02:20What year, my dear, did this conversation take place?
02:21In the face
02:22September 11 attack on the World Trade Center
02:24Hey, let me introduce you to a very important character, the second one to return.
02:27Tania is one of the victims of the September 11 attacks.
02:30Stu T
02:30She was very influential.
02:31The day of the bombing, 48:00 AM
02:34The first plane is landing in the north tower.
02:36The tower that was the second one in operation
02:38A simple lawyer working on the 100th floor
02:40In one of the two World Trade Center towers
02:42It's 9:20, which means approximately 15 minutes from now.
02:45The second plane is envious of the second tower.
02:47The southern tower where you work second
02:49The cat finished in a meeting on the 78th floor.
02:51Secondly, after the explosion, she will suffer very serious injuries.
02:54You'll say afterwards that the shield will hurt a lot
02:56She was so afraid that it would cut
02:58She gets very sick with the letters of the word "sheila" while trying to crawl out.
03:01Her escape was fueled by fire and smoke.
03:02Thania said that while she was trying to tango
03:04She saw many people around her dying
03:06Among them was a cunning man who had doubled his marriage certificate and told her to deliver it to his wife.
03:09And indeed, she did that and delivered the message.
03:11On September 11th, many New Yorkers
03:12They volunteered and risked their lives to save the victims.
03:15One of these heroes was Wells Crowther
03:17Known as the Red Bandana Man
03:19Secondly, she was one of the people whom Wells saved.
03:22But unfortunately, Wells died minutes after saving her.
03:24After six full days, my dear
03:26Thania wakes up from the coma
03:28She finds herself in the burns unit of the hospital
03:30And there she learned that her husband, who was in the North Tower, had died.
03:33Tania will tell her story to the media
03:34To become one of the most famous survivors of the September 11 attacks
03:38And she also transforms from a victim of the disaster
03:40A symbol of unity and resilience
03:42The phoenix that was born from the heart of the ashes
03:44Secondly, she will participate with some people in establishing what is known as
03:47In the World Trade Center Survivors Network
03:49This was an organization that helped many people overcome the accident and trauma.
03:52In 2007, the Dior Times decided to do a report on 9/11.
03:56On the sixth anniversary of these attacks
03:59She decided she would file a report about the other one.
04:01Dior Times and Hagit, a small problem
04:02The problem is that none of what the other woman said was true.
04:06What? Is this Muhammad in the small version?
04:07Mohammed, the interview was adding a bit more drama to create a dramatic plot, just like you do.
04:11What happened with Buhamad is that she's bringing up a character.
04:12He sat down at the coffee shop of history and said to this character, "The world raided."
04:15Between you and your sister, as much as you can afford, and that's it.
04:17What? What are you saying? Are you trying to make me a Jew?
04:18No, what they tell you is important, and I don't really report it very strongly, by the way.
04:21And going back to the second one, it wasn't showing skills.
04:23She was hardly saying anything.
04:25Everything tells you this is nonsense.
04:27A linguist who is empty-headed, who speaks nonsense, who calls himself whatever he wants, but that's not an exhaustive list.
04:30Thania, she wasn't even working at the World Trade Center.
04:33It was a big deal that didn't even exist in America at the time of the attack.
04:36So, Abu Hamad, is this how you get Dave? He's still alive, he didn't die.
04:38No, my dear, the truth is that Dave really did die.
04:40But he wasn't her husband.
04:41She saw the names of the victims, liked Dave, and decided to choose him.
04:43Anyone who wants confirmation from Dave can ask him.
04:44Oh Nahraso, this is Bouhamad
04:45What about the specific details you mentioned?
04:47The seventy-eighth round
04:48And her husband is in the hundredth floor
04:49and the wedding ring
04:50All this is a body type
04:51May God punish you, second one
04:52Let me tell you about another disaster, my dear?
04:53Do you appreciate Bouhamad?
04:54I didn't hear it again
04:54Keys is under her name
04:55Her real name
04:57A student from a wealthy family in Spain
04:59At the time of the attack, the student was attending her lectures as usual.
05:02At the university in Barcelona
05:03And of course, the shock that happened in America was huge for everyone.
05:05Of course, I don't need to tell you the consequences of this lie being exposed to everyone.
05:09Secondly, as I told you, she was a source of inspiration.
05:11For people who survived the events of September 11
05:13The problem isn't the lie.
05:14The problem lies with the people who believed the lie.
05:16Many people were saying that they recovered psychologically because of the support they received from others.
05:19That is, even though her claim was a lie
05:21Unless it has a positive impact on many people
05:24Director Angelo Guglielmo, who was planning to make a documentary about her,
05:27He said that he and others were very attached to her on a human level.
05:30Until life revealed itself and the situation became more complicated
05:32Angelo will write a book
05:33The woman wasn't there
05:34The true story of an incredible deception
05:36The woman who wasn't here
05:38He will tell how one person was able to deceive the public, the media, and support groups.
05:43After her life was exposed, Alicia completely disappeared from public view, and no one knows anything about her.
05:47And nobody knows anything about her.
05:47And when will I have a question that will kill me?
05:49Why did this woman tell this lie?
05:51Alicia found in another character the person who survived her people, a great and influential figure with a significant role in society.
05:56Let it be part of something important that earned her people's respect and love.
06:00Alicia did say that she did win, but to remain important, she needs to feel loved and heard.
06:04In a week, my dear, she didn't achieve any financial benefit.
06:07I didn't get any money from this.
06:08On the contrary, it wasn't just psychologically supportive.
06:10No, she was supporting him financially too.
06:12She had a very positive impact on our lives.
06:15She didn't want to exploit anyone.
06:16Where is she, my dear? We might think that this is a win.
06:18But she's my brother, even though it's something wrong.
06:20But she did a lot of great things
06:22No one was harmed; this gain was a beneficial gain.
06:25If you think about it and reflect, you will find that it is a useful gain.
06:27A fictional character who saved many people who needed her
06:30People wanted to see a similar tribute, but she is a strong victim capable of rising up and helping them.
06:34The question here, my dear, is whether the aesthetic effect you've created justifies this stalled profiteering.
06:39Let me out of here, my dear, and come back.
06:41First, let me ask, what is the definition of lying?
06:44Based on which he classified the need as a gain or not
06:47If you consult a dictionary of meanings, you'll find more than fifty synonyms for the word "lie".
06:51Deception, fraud, misleading, falsification, forgery, fabrication, charlatanism, seduction, hypocrisy, treachery, fraud
06:57All the sins I mentioned to you are not synonyms for lying
07:00It's true, he sells a huge and elaborate lie.
07:01For example, forging official documents
07:03Or like defrauding people or commercial fraud
07:06This is something that directly harms people.
07:08But his wife has a level of lying.
07:09We consider it simple, like eggs.
07:11It has nothing to do with the things that cause fire to spread.
07:13White lies are often social lies.
07:16The person who tells the lie is being lazy; this lie isn't harmful.
07:18Human judgment of a lie isn't simply based on whether it's white or harmful.
07:21People sell you out on the lie depending on their position within the lie.
07:24If we were the ones who renovated it, we'd feel it was something light.
07:26We'll see that the benefits far outweigh the drawbacks.
07:27If we were the ones exposed to lies, even in something small
07:30We will feel betrayed
07:31In his book, "Lying or Lying," Harris
07:33This man will say that the important basis for defining lying
07:35Not a white lie, nor a black lie
07:37But the intention of the one who lies
07:38When you were lying, what were you building?
07:40The idea is based on the intention of perpendicular deception.
07:42Harris is a prime example of verbal evasions.
07:44We're in this situation, and we don't lie outright.
07:46We are actually saying the truth.
07:49But it will be considered a lie.
07:50Because we know it will reach other people in the wrong way.
07:52This lie will make them think in a certain way.
07:55I'm not interested in correcting it.
07:56Because it's in my best interest that he didn't correct it.
07:58It's like when someone goes and tells their friends that their marriage in Gaza was due to betrayal.
08:01But he doesn't mention that he is the Khan.
08:03His companions would rub it against an enemy, a layer of medicine applied to him, and he would limit it.
08:05Say no, I'm not hostile
08:06Harris Bede is like, if he traveled to Washington
08:08He will visit the White House
08:09From there he made a call
08:10Contact Facebook
08:11If he told them, they would say it
08:12This is Sam Harris speaking to you from the White House.
08:14I want to talk to Mark Zuckerberg right now.
08:15So here the statement will literally be correct
08:17He is in the White House
08:18But the point of what he said
08:20deception
08:20He knows that if anyone is listening to him
08:22He will understand that he is talking to someone from the presidency.
08:24But he's actually Harris from the White House.
08:26This is a statement of truth that refutes falsehood.
08:28That's why, setting aside definitions and terminology, the king
08:31We can easily identify genuine books and say
08:33Books are like blindly taking someone else's work for granted.
08:36At a time when it is expected that you will speak sincerely
08:38But let's also say that books can sometimes be a hassle.
08:41Who did this to your daughter?
08:42Or it's just words we say that carry more than one meaning.
08:44Books are a case
08:45We can support it even though we're not doing anything.
08:47Sometimes silence can be the best response.
08:50Because it helps with deception
08:51For example, if I said, "Who killed so-and-so?"
08:54And you're the one who killed him, but you stayed silent.
08:56You're lying, you didn't lie, but you made a scene in a movie.
08:58I don't attract attention, I just beautify myself
09:00The film is based on a novel
09:02Ihsan Abdul Quddus, we will see Ahman Saki
09:03He embodies the character of Ibrahim
09:05Ibrahim is a young man from a working-class neighborhood; his father raised him
09:07He works in cemeteries and his mother works in homes.
09:09Despite his poverty, Ibrahim was able to work
09:11And he became a top university student.
09:13One day he meets Nahed
09:15A girl from a well-to-do family
09:17Nahed will mistakenly think that Ibrahim is from the same family.
09:19Her social standing could be that of Ibrahim
09:21He always met her, and he was never well-dressed.
09:23He knows how to dress, look good, and speak nicely.
09:25Therefore, she misjudged the class differences.
09:27What's between them because he's similar to the young men
09:29Those she gets to know in her community
09:30Ina's idea, my dear, is that Ibrahim Sabha, do you think so?
09:33Technically Ibrahim Makdabsh
09:35Ibrahim said nothing that didn't happen
09:37But at the same time, Ibrahim also didn't say anything.
09:39He didn't bother to correct what she thought about him.
09:41Nahed, my dear, you'll find out the truth by chance.
09:43Ibrahim asks, "Why did you lie to me?"
09:44She'll argue with him while he tells her, "I've never lied in my life."
09:47Unless we consider that the lipstick you love
09:49And your trip to the hairdresser is like this
09:50I did exactly the same as you; my appearance is just makeup.
09:53Social embellishment is a form of beautification if I am placed in a position where I have no fault.
09:55He met with me and considered my circumstances a flaw.
09:57Something she did wrong, she will try to adapt to what Ibrahim said
10:00But in the end, she won't be able to and she'll leave him.
10:03If we imagine, my dear Sam Harris, a very Abbasid scene
10:05Conqueror of Nile Cinema or the journey of the past
10:06Wajih came across this movie by chance and decided to watch it.
10:09He will find himself in a perfect situation
10:10Ibrahim embodies a type of book he calls "philosophical"
10:13Indirect or negative writing
10:15Sam Harris, in his book, divides
10:17Moral errors are of two types
10:18The wrong things we do, meaning mistakes in the answer
10:20So-and-so did the second type, then
10:22It's the good things we didn't do.
10:25It means errors in the ladder
10:26We are coming as a group, and this explains the first type to us.
10:28And we remain very careful with him
10:30For example, someone might reach out and quickly take 100 pounds.
10:32This is a deliberate act of theft with clear intent.
10:34So-and-so stole, but if someone
10:36Send me an extra 100 pounds on Instagram
10:38I didn't check them; I acted like I didn't have time for them.
10:40And there's definitely a mistake in the system, and that's money I owed a long time ago.
10:42Here, my dear, even though you didn't steal anything
10:44You got the money
10:46In this episode, society won't judge you the same way.
10:48The maximum level, despite the two actions
10:50Morally it's wrong; the difference is that the first one
10:52It contains a clear intent to steal
10:53But the second one might have happened by chance or through negligence.
10:55It came to you, twelve, but you weren't planning to steal.
10:58Hars, my dear, is exporting us saying that
10:59Maybe we'll all end up resembling Abraham.
11:02Each one of us is in a different place, Ibrahim.
11:03Even people whose files are GPA4
11:05Sometimes they hide the truth and find themselves
11:07They were forced to embellish the image.
11:08Ibrahim, my dear, we can say in one way or another that we have a problem.
11:11Almost the same as what most men have
11:13The information must remain large and secure from the other party.
11:15Especially the young lady in this relationship, you know her
11:17He sees it as a small, insignificant piece of information.
11:19You don't need to worry.
11:20I'm an engineer, about 30 years old, and I love you. I have a car and an apartment.
11:24This is important information you need to know about me.
11:26In the abbot, the topic is that I'm married
11:27And in it, Ziad in Grade 6D has marginal details
11:29After you didn't ask
11:31When I asked, I told you that the girl was lying and she couldn't hear me.
11:33I'm not comfortable and we actually want to get a divorce
11:35I'm telling you, she'll tell you the important information.
11:36Of course, my dear, you see my inkwell as a source of pride, but I'm just naming you.
11:39Look me in the eye, you don't have a single little bit of Ibrahim.
11:41You yourself have never done anything like this before.
11:43The truth is, we might be doing all of this.
11:45Almost every day, for example, when you're in a hurry
11:47You see someone you know in the street and pretend
11:49I didn't see him so I wouldn't have to greet him and get things done.
11:51Or you go ahead and propose, only to discover that the bride's father
11:53What are the opinions of an expert on conspiracy theories?
11:55Galid wall, flat land
11:57He has a proven theory that Ahmed El-Fishawy is a crocodile.
11:59So here you are forced to nod your head
12:01He agreed with every word he said so he could see you as a respectable groom.
12:03And you earn a point from him and he marries you to the bride
12:05If we think about it, we'll find a lot of lies around us.
12:07There's a lot we say and a lot we don't explain.
12:10Just so we can beautify ourselves and look better
12:12Imagine if all of humanity were afflicted by the curse of Pinocchio in the famous story.
12:16The child whose nose grew bigger every time he pulled
12:18Pinocchio, the belly of the story, was a child
12:19But the irony is that children are actually the least attractive people.
12:23Not because they are innocent or anything, God forbid.
12:25But because they don't know how to lie
12:27A child doesn't learn to read white books until after four years.
12:30This is because he is still in the stage of understanding the feelings of the people around him.
12:33And to understand their expectations of him
12:34The older he gets, the more he adjusts his behavior and understands that he can attract.
12:38Or he understands that he needs to hear what people like to hear.
12:41In order to gain acceptance
12:43But my dear, we can't keep innocent children forever.
12:45We need to broaden the atmosphere of this complex world.
12:47The world is full of different interactions and social rules that we are obliged to abide by.
12:52Why? To get accepted
12:54The food won't be thrown on the table, you don't have to stir things up, Muhammad Hazem.
12:57Well, you won't eat anymore. You really don't have to give your detailed opinion on everything.
13:00Thank you, because firstly, there are people who are steadfast, and secondly, so you can eat again.
13:03Social compliments and politeness aim to make us accepted by people in our situation
13:07And it keeps going back and forth, meaning it's repeated.
13:09The question we want to address now is: Are white lies really better?
13:12Does the more we add compliments and white lies, the easier our transactions will go?
13:16He'll come at you from this direction and tell you what's happening.
13:18In his book on the alleged right to lie for humanitarian reasons
13:21The German philosopher Immanuel Kant believed that lying is always a moral wrong.
13:26Regardless of its many causes and forms
13:28This is because it is simply not wrong for people
13:30But you have made a serious mistake regarding your own rights and obligations towards yourself.
13:33Do you want two people inside you, one internal and one external?
13:36When you intentionally say something other than what you're thinking
13:38So you are breaking the relationship between those two selves
13:40It breaks the connection between what you think and what you say.
13:43It's created from your true personality that exists inside you, which has become an artificial persona.
13:47People appeared, and over time you began to lose your identity as an honest person.
13:50The division between these two selves makes your feelings become confused.
13:53The result is that you become almost a human being, not a complete human being.
13:56This is your own fault
13:57Now let's talk about your mistake towards those you are trying to deceive.
13:59Fant says that we are all born with something called intrinsic value
14:03This simply means honoring yourself and your image in your own eyes.
14:05Its foundation is based on the fact that we are all rational.
14:07We are all capable of making decisions with complete independence.
14:10This means that books are on someone, even if they are white books.
14:13It is considered harmful and like his generosity
14:15This is because you are assuming he is naive, weak, and unable to deal with reality.
14:18He is unable to make his own decision
14:20Books reduce the freedom of the people we love.
14:22This is because we are hiding the truth from them.
14:24The truth that emerges regarding their range of choices
14:26And it helps them make the right decision
14:28He used to say that the best service you can offer someone you love is
14:30If you stay honest with us
14:31Honestly, Abu Hamad, I feel this statement is very idealistic.
14:33He does not belong to this world
14:34The man's luck is dreaming of the virtuous city.
14:36Utopia
14:36Utopia, the virtuous city
14:38We want to try
14:39Let's continue
14:39In a book about the right to lie
14:41A famous debate is documented between Kant and the French philosopher Benjamin Constant.
14:44Benjamin will say that the principle was a German principle.
14:47Yes, the truth matters.
14:48But not all the time and not for everyone.
14:50Not everyone has the right to know the truth.
14:52Even if it belongs to him
14:54White books are sometimes useful on a black day.
14:56Here, Heard was addressing this philosopher and saying to him
14:58The truth is not yours.
14:59So that you can repeat it, who will you give it to and who will you hide it from?
15:01When it attracts even if its foundation is good
15:03So you are breaking a universal ethical principle that has no exceptions.
15:06Part of the argument between Kant and Constant De
15:08It will be about a fictional incident called "The Killer at the Door."
15:12The French philosopher Cant said
15:14Imagine a killer stalking your friend who came seeking refuge with you.
15:16Your friend is ignorant of your home, hiding from this killer.
15:19The killer knows the address, and Wajih knocked on your door.
15:21And he asks you, "Is anyone inside?"
15:23And your friend really is a real gem.
15:25The starting point here, according to the philosopher Constant, is that you are lying.
15:27But here, according to what Count said
15:29You have a moral obligation to tell the truth to the killer.
15:32Even if that means the victim will die
15:34Cont. Bey'albek, the truth is not yours alone.
15:36Shire with the killer
15:37Kount is telling you to step on the life of the years and the coffee shop equipment
15:39Bread and salt, because you don't possess the truth.
15:41It's unethical for you to speak the truth about the killer.
15:43No, she's advising me
15:44Joking aside
15:45But according to what Comte said, this might have some merit.
15:48You must tell the truth, even if it means the victim will die.
15:50any
15:51For example, your friend might have overheard the killer hiding.
15:53He left through another door without you knowing.
15:55If the killer were telling the truth, he would write to you and leave.
15:57A rose walks in the same direction your friend is walking from
16:00He sees him and goes to kill you
16:01And at that time, you would bear some of the responsibility for what happened to your friend.
16:04Because even if you didn't mean to be malicious, your lie is still a lie.
16:06He was the cause of the confrontation that led to his friend's death.
16:09And what if the killer isn't from your side?
16:11If no one is at the wedding, kill someone else instead of your friend.
16:14What if this is the crux of the matter?
16:15Of course, my dear, you might still see Kant's words as backward.
16:18I agree with you
16:19But what he was trying to say was that the idea
16:21Not in the search for the best results
16:23We're not supposed to decide whether to tell the truth or not.
16:25Based on our perspective and the results we expect.
16:28Because results are never guaranteed
16:30Even if this line is straight
16:32Sometimes you might kill someone in order to improve the outcome.
16:35For example, you might see this person as evil.
16:37Therefore, if you kill him, you will improve the state of society.
16:39This will plunge society into chaos.
16:41This could create sequences and scenarios that are beyond your ability to contain and control.
16:46So, according to what I said, we only have the moral principle.
16:49This, my dear, is a very well-known debate in philosophy.
16:51Are the actions correct because of their good results?
16:54Nor is it true in itself, regardless of the results.
16:57So, the advice is to do the right thing, not with the pleasure you imagine.
16:59If she went to a philosopher, he'd ask her what the definition of "right" is, and he'd drive her crazy.
17:02According to Kant, all we have is the principle.
17:04Lying is a mistake that cannot be justified by any outcome, even if it takes someone's life.
17:08My dear, he always looked at the bigger pictures.
17:10For example, the "murder at the door" hypothesis—the presence of the murderer is an exceptional circumstance that forces you to be suspicious.
17:15Here you justified the lie by citing the circumstances.
17:17So, according to what I said, if I extended it in a straight line
17:19Everyone will choose the moment when lying will benefit them.
17:22He says that this is the exception
17:23I was forced to lie because this situation is similar to that of a murderer.
17:26I had to beg in order to survive
17:28If everyone made a special exception based on their own circumstances
17:31In the full picture, we are all guilty of lying.
17:34We'll convert it to a Ceuta base and continue.
17:35And then the concepts of honesty and truth themselves will lose their meaning.
17:38And here there are no general morals that guarantee the stability of society
17:41A society, in order to be a cohesive and united community, needs to have trust.
17:45Trust will be threatened and relationships will be damaged in this episode.
17:48No one will be able to rely on anyone else at all.
17:50Sam Harris would consider honesty to be an absolute moral principle.
17:53We must seek His permission at all times, in all places, and under all circumstances.
17:57This is because one woman's lie is that she went her own way.
17:59And it extended its straightness, reality will deviate
18:01Until the lies became so numerous that we forgot the truth altogether, Zali was treating us.
18:05Jayzi, my dear, you might like some of this if you like philosophy.
18:07But your brain doesn't need to be a philosophy student to understand this, because lying is disastrous not only for moral or other reasons.
18:12Philosophically speaking, lying is also disastrous for biological reasons; it's harmful to health.
18:17The story begins with one white letter followed by another white letter, and then another white letter, and then another white letter.
18:22You'll find that the value system in your nervous system justifies everything.
18:27Whatever the color of the scribes, they're still with us in the town.
18:29The question here is, how does this happen?
18:30It contains, my dear, a small part of the brain called the amygdala.
18:33This is responsible for emotions such as fear and the sense of time.
18:36It works like an alarm bell when you sense something is wrong.
18:39Or something wrong you're doing, like lying.
18:41In a 2016 study in Nature Neuroscience
18:43If the amygula, with each new writer, begins to become dulled
18:47With repeated lying, what is called
18:50The amygula starts to get used to it and stops responding with the same force.
18:53The first thing he wrote was a very alarm bell, as if you were stealing from him.
18:56Over time, the alarm will turn into simple notifications.
18:59Little by little, silent mode
19:01The books also waste time sneaking into the study area.
19:03Until it becomes ingrained and established as the truth.
19:06She wrote it and believed it
19:07Based on my sense of study, I deal with the six thousand and four
19:08Titled
19:10Participants in the experiment are shown a video of a theft
19:13He asks a group to provide false descriptions.
19:16The criminal's appearance in the video
19:18Why test her on this handling after a week?
19:19The participants in the experiment mixed up the lies they told
19:22And between the truth
19:23They said details they invented.
19:25They were required to invent it.
19:27Until they believed her
19:28They identified with her completely
19:29This is because the snakes are merely expressing themselves on behalf of the writers.
19:31The emergence of these scribes into the world
19:32And by participating all the time
19:34This could lead to what is called
19:35Inflated belief
19:38Memory
19:38There is confusion in it
19:39And she begins to treat the scribes as a reality
19:42On the other hand
19:43We can test its accuracy and see it.
19:44In the driving of a turbine
19:45Or in harsh life experiences
19:46Our minds sometimes act like veterinarians, protecting us from them.
19:48Because he writes to us
19:49Either it makes us forget her
19:50Or let us imagine it
19:52However, it happened differently.
19:53Over time, our brains have become accustomed to this action
19:55It didn't happen
19:56And this is what we call
19:57Stimulating forgetfulness
19:58Motivated Forgetting
19:59Memory
20:00The tape records everything that happened
20:02This is a story we keep modifying
20:03According to our feelings and needs
20:05Now you know, my dear, how our minds work
20:07As he said, he was a genius at inventing books.
20:09He also said "Aisha"
20:10And she is very affected by it.
20:11And our brains can all be assembled together
20:13Our awareness of the past and the present
20:15Therefore, the future
20:16All of this is affected and changed because of his books.
20:18In 2007
20:19New Delhi Police
20:20She was pleased with the businessman
20:21Munder Singh and her maid
20:22The businessman and his assistant
20:23They were involved in murders
20:25The police injected them with a substance
20:26sodium pentothal
20:27This is a substance known as
20:29Truth serum
20:31Under the influence of this substance
20:32The accused confessed to horrific crimes.
20:34Therefore, they were arrested and imprisoned.
20:36His name is the truth serum.
20:37This is a title
20:38Many medications are located beneath it.
20:39Some people believe they are under the influence of these drugs.
20:41The person cannot attract
20:42He doesn't know how to lie
20:43Let me tell you, my dear
20:44Scientifically, this is impossible.
20:46No drug possesses this extraordinary ability.
20:49Nothing can make your brain bigger
20:50He doesn't attract
20:51This quantity of cradles plays a simple game with your body.
20:53Expected internet speed
20:54By slowing down transmission and reception
20:56What happens between the brain and the spinal cord
20:58This is a difficult condition for the brain.
21:00He works in it
21:02He won't be able to invent a story, a lie, or a dialogue.
21:06It's difficult for him to do that.
21:07But it's not impossible for him to do that.
21:08Therefore
21:08People often say life
21:10But let's imagine for a moment that there's a property there.
21:13If you take it, you'll never be able to write.
21:14Will this make your life better?
21:16Imagine, my dear, you met your friend and he asked you what you thought of his appearance.
21:19You were completely satisfied
21:20I told him, but don't say it's a scene, it's not a scene
21:22Imagine, my dear, yourself in a certain state of guidance
21:24Your friend brought you a gift that was far from what you wanted.
21:27Because you're honest, I liked honesty.
21:29Like Fouad El Mohandes, he's imposing hypocrisy, that's how you'll go.
21:30We're making a gift in Qush, your friend, a prize here, you're a true friend.
21:33But honesty here made you a person
21:35Bully and hurtful, my dear
21:37That's a very exaggerated perception because you
21:39It assumes that honesty equals rudeness.
21:41And here Sami Haddad says that honesty doesn't mean
21:43If you tell the truth in a silver-tongued way
21:44You don't have to be rude and give someone a piece of your mind.
21:46And that's where your brain is supposed to use all its cleverness.
21:49The one who possesses this skill is the one who can love you, writers.
21:51And he should adjust its details now.
21:53He harnesses talent
21:55And this creativity is in a sincere response.
21:57Without being hurtful, remain honest.
21:59Give them their due and you will remain a governor.
22:01On the feelings of those around him, for example, in a situation
22:03The Christmas I'm telling you about, you should expect a gift
22:05A certain friend of yours brought you a credit card.
22:06So that you can talk to her, for example in a situation like this, she might reply
22:09Tell your friend honestly that this gift is very tasteful.
22:11But I'm glad you thought of it.
22:13I am very grateful for your effort, even if this gift isn't the most suitable thing for her.
22:16There is no doubt, my dear, that we present the contexts
22:17It might be much more polite than being completely honest.
22:19And with time, our answer will be
22:21Believe me, my dear, when I told you about the experience.
22:23And how do veiled people start to get used to it?
22:25It starts with lying, and sometimes it begins
22:27Believe me, she's lying. She's a worker. You're here.
22:39He's telling the truth, we'll learn more
22:41Master the skill of balancing our principles
22:43And between the feelings of the person in front of us, even if we made a mistake
22:45We found two young men with the door open for clarification.
22:47And the modification means, for example, that I said something that wasn't accurate.
22:49100% you can chew it again later
22:51Okay, Abu Hamad, I gave you a test. I feel that
22:53My clothes make me look a little heavy, what do you think?
22:55Now show me how you're going to weigh her mother.
22:57Aziz, don't play anything else, you're good at everything.
22:59And in every shape there is a shape
23:09Actually, this question
23:11Some people believe that it's not meant to be a genuine question.
23:14Some people are asking to check on others
23:15Is it sweet or not?
23:16That's a lie, my friend. Its danger, as we said, is in the long run.
23:19Adhering to honesty is not only important in terms of...
23:21The principles, ethics, and society we want
23:23We preserve it and always create a feeling
23:25Trusting in this can be beneficial in practical ways.
23:27In a pragmatic way, because it reveals your problems.
23:29The difficult thing on the surface makes you
23:31And those around you can see it, for example, my dear
23:33She's living in a toxic relationship and lying about herself.
23:35She says everything is fine and will go on, but she's scared.
23:37Or she's stingy or doesn't want to change, so here
23:39Honesty is what can save her, my dear.
23:41If he has an addiction to something bad or something
23:43I don't want it, so here the books are being used and are not being protected.
23:45Because of the people, the problem is getting bigger and bigger.
23:47Honesty also allows you to discover many things.
23:49Like some people, it's impossible to be yourself
23:51Relationships that are impossible to continue
23:53Unless you're lying, that's why honesty isn't always the answer.
23:55It would be easy, but it's difficult to read that it makes
23:57Your relationship with yourself is much stronger and it helps you
23:59Be closer to your feelings and your true identity.
24:01And most importantly, my dear, it makes it lighter
24:03Sleep comfortably with your head on the pillow, Prince
24:05It's true, you're lonely, a bit of a pest, and nobody can stand you.
24:07So, the mother of society and everything she does is wrong.
24:09You go and turn yourself in, but you're easing your conscience.
24:11Relaxed and carefree, oh, you who went to bed shocked
24:13No unfair patch
24:14All this you're saying, you need to protect her.
24:17It remained a lie, and there were many details surrounding it.
24:19You start making up a lie here and a lie there
24:21To make the matter more complicated
24:22And it makes people start lying to you
24:24So this cycle of lies begins to become a large circle.
24:27It's fragile and it will start to affect you.
24:29Two Rizq
24:30Rizq, people will first discover what you did.
24:32The second benefit is that she discovers you are a liar.
24:34So, my dear, you still need a strong memory for this.
24:37And I swear to God, don't you remember what I said?
24:39Eve, I gave four because I myself don't remember.
24:40Market Winnie, my dear, says
24:44Tell me what happened exactly as it happened.
24:46Every time, she'll be looking for it.
24:47As happened, thank you
24:48And also, my dear, sometimes we as individuals
24:50They don't want the truth to be revealed
24:52So, my dear, in this episode we are speaking from the speaker's point of view.
24:55Not from the listener's point of view
24:56Imagine you remain on the other side, on the other side of the equation.
24:58At that point, my dear, the truth will be
25:00Too many things for me
25:02The truth, even if it's harsh
25:04It's much better than that.
25:05Let me know I'm wrong now so I can correct myself.
25:08Instead of going astray
25:10And I think I'm right, and I think I'm good
25:12And I thought I looked and left
25:13As the popular saying goes, "Blessed is he who made me cry and made others cry for me."
25:16He didn't make me laugh, and people laughed at me.
25:18I'm sorry, my dear, I personally blame myself.
25:20The problem with society isn't honesty or being straightforward.
25:22The problem lies in our approach to honesty and straightforwardness.
25:24What's the problem if someone tells me?
25:26You don't look well today
25:28What's wrong with someone telling me, "You, Ahmed, don't know how to sing"?
25:30This isn't Al-Mafroudi, and the problem is that Al-Mafroudi needs something good.
25:33Someone is trying to advise me
25:34So he can try to make me sit down better
25:35Let history come to me from you in the room, it's better to come
25:37Egypt is close to Idol, the Fiatak is the best
25:39From the Fiat Ahlam, I'm trying to be honest, Maram Ahlam
25:42Hajja Azizi, we are here
25:43We reached the farthest point we could reach
25:45In philosophy, science, and sources
25:47It's easy for me to tell you simply that honesty
25:49Yingi Wan, the books are a monster
25:51This is the lesson we learned from our conversation today, and thank you.
25:53That's what your family, teachers, and religious figures told you.
25:56From when you were a small family
25:56Until I graduated from university, but if the topic
25:59It's that simple, I'll actually keep you in a state of aversion.
26:01I must admit that life is complicated.
26:03Much more than that
26:04The novel, Claire, tells the story of a woman who will be preoccupied with the idea of ​​lying for the rest of her life.
26:07And she'll choose Career based on the fact that she writes novels.
26:09I mean, you invent lies about the Living Teams
26:11Like a screenwriter, he's ultimately a conversation writer.
26:13Claire in her first and most famous novel
26:15My father, Shakespeare, will choose the novel's apology.
26:17About how a lie can sometimes turn into a lie
26:19The protagonist of the novel finds herself through the means of survival.
26:22In a forced psychiatric hospital
26:23She claims she's crazy in order to take
26:25Financial compensation, but she wants compensation.
26:27Why? So you can pay the lawyer's fees.
26:30The one who will prove she's not crazy
26:31Well, you don't understand anything, my dear. We're in a circle here.
26:33Locked, its heroine forced to attract
26:35She says she's crazy to convince them that she's sane.
26:37Claire wrote a novel in this style
26:39Because life can sometimes be
26:41This is complicated and chaotic.
26:43It's difficult to live it with complete honesty, and you can prove that.
26:45Daily statistics show a lot
26:47From the story I'm telling you about, and when psychology appreciates it
26:49We attract on average every day
26:51Six times, even if it's a long call.
26:53Ten minutes, so there's a sixty percent chance that
26:55It includes at least one book like
26:57Everything's great, and you're waiting for me?
26:59Sprinkle it with something that's covered a little so you can spray it all inside you
27:01The books, my dear, are available in the CVs.
27:03If you read my CV, there's a chance that
27:0540% of his information is no longer genuine.
27:07Or at least not one minute of each
27:098 patients write it on their plates even though the hospital
27:11It's the place where your books might be.
27:13It really kills you
27:15The vision is clear, it will be considered that
27:17Kant's famous murder dilemma
27:19The ideal dilemma and its conclusions
27:21It's true, but
27:22It's not acceptable to be a problem in an argument
27:25Ideally, between two philosophers, the time is closed.
27:27According to Claire, there were millions of Jewish refugees.
27:29At the time of their admission to the second care unit, they were saved.
27:31Because of those who hid them when they opened the door
27:33They lived thanks to the people who lied
27:35They told the Nazis about their secrets.
27:37We don't have anyone inside us, we can't live it
27:39Honestly, without a single lie
27:40Not a complete lie, not a lie with any truth in it.
27:42It's not a philosophical dilemma with a single solution.
27:44It might seem to you that I'm advising you to stay true to yourself.
27:47But I'm not giving you clichéd advice.
27:48This is because life, in its early stages, can be written as a lie.
27:50But his life is very long and very complicated
27:53Life is about daily choices.
27:55Tests that don't end
27:56The problem of rejection is the problem of lying; both are practices.
27:59If we wrote even a simple lie
28:01So we activate a muscle as soon as that muscle
28:02It gradually becomes more active and stronger if we allow it.
28:05She'll drag an even bigger lie behind her.
28:06That's why no matter how white a lie is, its problem is
28:08The problem isn't with the thing itself, but rather that it's that
28:10By doing your whole brain project, you'll realize that hard work
28:12It's the solution, and if not the solution, it's possible.
28:14The solution, as I told you, is a possible lie.
28:16It changes you like a snowball that grows as long as it remains.
28:18It might burn you up and make you change
28:20Your strength and your entire personality
28:22Like the other one I started the story with
28:24Don't remember your life at the beginning.
28:26How do you deal with it? I'm sure, my dear, that this is the second one.
28:28Sometimes you believe her, that she
28:30Indeed, one of the victims is A.K.
28:32It's not attractive, even if you deal with the authorities.
28:33As a practice, you will also find an unpaved road.
28:36You will be exposed to difficult tests, embarrassment, and annoyance.
28:38But with time you'll feel like you're one person
28:40Grounded and steady in one life
28:42I'm not dragged along by books and writing
28:44And stories in your imagination remain a human being living only one life.
28:46And it's not just a matter of personal appearances that they are concerned about.
28:48A thousand books, didn't I tell you, my dear life?
28:50It's very complicated. I myself am with Tzali and Setsek.
28:52And sometimes you attract, attract, who do you attract, you?
28:54You're saying, my dear, my dear, I don't know you, I'm talking to the camera lens.
28:57Honesty compels me to tell you that I don't know you.
28:59But I'm very happy that you're watching the program.
29:01Why? Because you see the situation that Fetch
29:02In the next case, you'll find sources that we have on YouTube. Subscribe to the channel.
29:04Do you know, my dear, who is the most attractive actress?
29:06The artist Kadab Alloush

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