Paradise Lost and Tartuffe are similar works, both exploring the truth and the wrong theme. Therefore, Milton's "Lost Paradise" depicts a constant fight between good and evil. In the paradise of paradise, security from Eve 's primary state could not distinguish between truth and falsehood, so he fell into anxiety and sinful rebellion against the world. Likewise, Molière's Tartuff shows a hypocritical problem. Tartuffe shows how difficult it is to deceive others and how difficult it is to tell the truth.
Since these habits are not mutually exchanged, you would rather participate in each of them. Today, I will discuss another idea that you can help identify the truth from falsehood. As you can understand from the title, this is a statement from management guru Peter Drucker being measured. Strangely, many real processes are like selling homes. You have to endure the long plateau without any improvements and suddenly you can see your results grow exponentially. I discussed this phenomenon in another article entitled "This is how your expectations can compromise your success."
Some of Marx's words are correct. This is not surprising. Every wrong philosophy and system contains elements of truth. The mixture of truth and falsehood is usually deadly than a pure lie and this lie can be distinguished only once and can be isolated. When it got pure erroneous exposure, the battle is over. When a lethal mixture of ideologies contains elements of truth these elements tend to reactivate after it has been proved that it has been destroyed. This shows multiple aggressiveness in Marxist longevity, Stalinist terrorism, atrocities, and history of terrorism, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Afghanistan.
In addition, you can think of the truth by opposing lies - the truth is good. But in this definition, we are now caught up in wrong questions. Is this a fact, or is not what I have seen, or what I have thought. Or this is consistent with Plato's term "fake" "ideal". As you can see, when entering this field, I will walk on an unstable ground. One of the effects of postmodernism is the collapse of metanarathies that used to lead us morally. These "traditional" stories give meaning to the chaotic world and help understand the meaning of what we do in a beautiful life.