Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Should the library ban taking pictures?

Should the library ban taking pictures?

As a Buddhist, when I go to any temple, I always abide by the rules of "no Buddha, no bodhisattva and no arhat". Although there are no hard and fast rules, I will understand that once this civilization cultivated for thousands of years collides with flash, it will be harmful (except for artistic works and data collection) and will inevitably embarrass the Buddha and myself.

If the library is regarded as a temple for scholars and learners, is it appropriate to take photos?

Indeed, the book will not feel embarrassed, will not be ashamed because you hold me and take a photo with me without touching my inner soul, and will not be ecstatic because of the perfect camera angle. He stood quietly in a corner, guarding a unique civilization of human beings in the form of words, carefully guarding a cultural paradise that is about to disappear, and looking at the coffin that will be buried sooner or later like a general who died generously.

For those who love books, the process of reading is like an archaeologist's scientific research: wear gloves to prevent cultural relics from being damaged, let a mask filter out the polluted air exhaled by themselves, and brush out ancient or nearby civilizations from the devastated surface, so that memories are no longer dusty by years and they are no longer confused by history.

Such a holy place, you can come to observe, make a pilgrimage and dig for treasures. Taking pictures is always an inappropriate behavior. Moreover, most people may not have been to the library for four years, and even if they have, they are mostly busy with "daily" things such as postgraduate entrance examination and final review. On the eve of parting, I came to the library with the feeling of "taking photos with books and letting youth fly their dreams", which was a bit too voluntary.

Just now, a kindly-looking young lady borrowed a photo of A Brief History of Time from me, but I must say that taking a photo with this kind of physics homework of high school students is really out of the "artistic atmosphere" cultivated in our school for four years. If you want to highlight the divine brilliance of your reason and wisdom, I suggest that she take a photo with Auguste Comte's On Positive Spirit or Spinoza's Descartes Principle. The skin is fair and shiny, and the book is generous, which can show a small face.