The blind man stands before you, when you wait for you to cross the street. With no warning, he started crossing the road even though the light did not change yet. He did not seem to be in danger until you saw that there was a car half a mile from him. The man was completely unaware of the situation and kept walking across the street. When he and a car were hit, when you and many others were looking at him with fear. Every one of you has plenty of time to save him, but you just watch and hope that others can do it.
As an Indian, Canadian, British woman studying at New York University, I would like to become a doctor, I have made a diagnosis here. I call it: indifference. The word indifference comes from the work of Greek's indifference ("no emotion") and sorrow ("emotion"). Stoic usually uses it to explain indifference or lack of attention, emotion and emotion. Indifference to brain energy and effort is not subjective, but it may be exhausting. Our bodies use indifference to create an irregular daily routine or to cope with seemingly unresolved pain. Unlike before, the problem is more international than ever. In the past, problems could be solved through the international system framework; domestic problems were handled by the state jurisdiction. In today's constantly changing environment, this is absolutely not true. Because the controversies break the boundaries and become more complex, it is difficult for us to understand them.
Indifference is a lack of emotions, emotions, interests, attention to important things. Indifference is an indifferent condition, or suppression of emotions such as attention, excitement, motivation, passion. Indifferent individuals lack attention or interest in emotional, social, spiritual, philosophical or material life and the world. People who are mentally debilitated may lack the purpose, value, or meaning of life. Indifferent people may also show insensitivity and dullness. In positive psychology, indifference is explained as a result of feeling that an individual does not have the skill level (ie "liquidity") necessary to confront the task. It may also be the result of not having found any problems at all (eg, the problem has nothing to do with them, or conversely they have learned that they are helpless). Indifference may be a sign of more specific psychological problems such as schizophrenia and dementia. But indifference is what everyone is facing to a certain extent.