Once upon a time, six blind men lived in the village. One day the villagers said to them, "Hey, there is an elephant in the village today."
They do not know what the elephant is. They decided "Please let me feel even if you can not see it." They all went to the place where the elephant is. Each of them touched an elephant
"Ah, no! It's like a thick branch," said the third person touching the elephant's trunk.
They began to discuss elephants, and each of them insisted that he was right. They seem to have become uncomfortable. A wise man passed by and he saw this. He stopped and asked them "What's wrong?" They said, "We can not agree on what an elephant is." The wise quietly explained to them: "All of you are correct, each one of you is different because each one touched a different part of the elephant, said all the features of people."
The lesson of this story is that you may say something someone might make sense. Sometimes we can see the truth, but sometimes their opinions differ, they may not agree. Therefore, we should say, "It's not a controversy like a blind man, but you may have reasons." So we will not participate in the discussion. Jainism explained that the truth can be described in seven different ways. So, you can see how extensive our religion is. It tells us that we are tolerant to others. This allows us to make friends with people of different minds. This is called Syadvada, Anekantvad or Manifold Predictions theory.
Once upon a time, there was an elephant and four blind men. They are very interested in elephants, so they reach out to touch the elephant. "The elephant is like a rope!" The first person who pinched the tail was willing to cry. "It is wrong, it sounds like a big tree!" People standing by the foot were disapproved. The claim that "It is as strong and thick as the wall!" Is the third argument. "You are all fools!" The last person shouted while tracking the movement of the suitcase. "Elephant is a big hose!"
Several blind men encountered animals. Someone said that this is an elephant. The blind man asked: "What kind of person is the elephant?" They began to touch that body. One of them said: "It looks like a pillar," This blind man only touched his foot, another man said, "The elephant is like a cage of a shell." I touched its ears. Similarly, people who touch the trunk and abdomen talk about it differently. No one is wrong, but none are wrong. They are right in their own small observations. People will encounter the same problem when viewing data. Looking at Twitter's earnings from 2014 to 2015, Twitter is a growing company. However, once you look at the growth of users, this is quite another story.
The way they operate is explained in "Blind men and elephants" This is an ancient Hindu fable depicting blind men who have never met an elephant. what is that. Of course, everyone, his knowledge is limited to the tail, or foot or ivory, his subjective truth is different from the next person. Because everyone's perceptions are limited, nobody has a complete career. In this way, the New York Times adopted the national stereotypes of Asian grooming gangs into our psychology. Through the criminal acts of the Caucasian British they achieved this through dropouts, terminology of racial discrimination, and expansion of British Asian crimes.