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This parable gently challenges a common assumption: that peace requires inactivity, and that stillness means silence in the literal sense. Peace is not found by shutting down a system. It is found by recognizing the silent field in which the system runs.
By Darkus HobartThis parable gently challenges a common assumption: that peace requires inactivity, and that stillness means silence in the literal sense. Peace is not found by shutting down a system. It is found by recognizing the silent field in which the system runs.