In ancient Greek mythology, there is a prince of Cyprus named Picmalion who fell in love with a beautiful statue, prayed in front of the statue every day, and determined to marry the statue as his wife for years. The statue felt so sincere, so it really turned into a living beauty and married him. Later generations referred to this "sincerely, gold and stone" situation as the "Pikmalion effect". Of course, there is a popular saying in recent years, called "the law of attraction". From Einstein's theory of relativity, the past, present and future exist at the same time. As portrayed in The Creed, the future has already happened. So what can travel through time? I think it is the collective unconscious, or the unconscious itself. So in fact everyone can know the future, just as this black kid knew from the very beginning that he would be successful. The Pikmalion effect occurs in all aspects of our lives. For example, I have a lot of stupid guests. I often check out for various reasons without seeing them. Interesting guests are coming, my heart There will always be an inexplicable joy. Many people know that they will have a relationship with me and so on. Therefore, we often say that we should let go to get it, "If you want to plant flowers without blooming, and unintentionally plant willows and willows to make a shade", the feeling of loss is stronger than that of gain (prospect theory), so it will be easier to produce a kind of attachment. But you don't know whether this kind of attachment belongs to the attachment of success or the attachment of failure. So I said to ignore the details (or trick) and feel eternal. Otherwise, it's easy to enter a paradox-what you care about is ultimately lost, but you can't care about what you don't care about. So often the best things come silently, without violent storms. This is not only based on psychology, but also makes sense from the perspective of metaphysics (although I think psychology is also metaphysics in the end, and the so-called metaphysics is just a science that we have not yet understood). Now that the future has been written, can we just do nothing and wait for the future to come? First of all, from the perspective of fatalism, there are reasons for this inertia, because a person's life is inaction, so he will have this idea. Secondly, the son once said: rich and noble are what people want, and if you don't get it by the way, you won't be where you are.
View more about The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind reviews