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Stories about philosophical principles

A person who doesn’t know when to lose something is a stupid and pathetic person. This is also the philosophy of life. Below are stories about philosophical principles compiled by me. Thank you for reading.

About Stories Containing Philosophical Principles 1

Liu Zongyuan, the great writer of the Tang Dynasty, said in "The Legend of the Grasshopper" that there is a small insect, the Grasshopper, that is good at carrying things. When walking, he encounters When you find something, you pick it up and carry it on your back, and walk forward with your head held high. Its back is stiff and the things piled on it cannot fall off. As a result, it carried more and more things on its back and became heavier and heavier. Its greedy behavior eventually caused it to fall to the ground from exhaustion. I heard from a friend that a tourist went to the Three Gorges. While standing at the stern of the boat to admire the scenery on both sides of the river, he accidentally dropped his handbag into the river. There were many valuables in the bag. He immediately jumped into the water to retrieve the bag without thinking. The bag was caught in his hand, but the man never came up again. If this traveler learns to get used to losing, he will not lose his life as well.

People come into this world naked and leave empty-handed. It is impossible for a person to have anything permanently in his life. After a person obtains life, he will first have childhood, then youth, adulthood, and old age. However, all this continues to be lost. When you gain something, you are actually losing it. So what we gain in life is itself a kind of loss. In life, there are gains and losses, gains and losses.

Some people have said it well: when you gain the reputation or noble rights of a celebrity, you lose the freedom to be an ordinary person; when you gain huge wealth, you lose the joy of being indifferent to poverty; you gain When you gain the satisfaction of a successful career, you lose the goal you are striving for. If each of us seriously thinks about our own gains and losses, we will find that we have indeed experienced losses to varying degrees in the process of gaining. The whole life is actually a process of gains and losses to varying degrees.

A person who doesn’t know when to lose something is a stupid and pathetic person. Anyone who violates this process will be like a greedy locust, falling to the ground tired and never getting up again.

So gains and losses coexist. They are a pair of brothers who can never be separated. The key is how you seize the opportunity and how to correctly view the dialectical relationship between gains and losses. Let yourself lose and gain more than what you lost.

A "lucky loss" of Madame Curie is the best explanation. In 1883, after graduating from high school, the innocent Madame Curie had no choice but to work as a tutor in a squire's home because her family was poor and she had no money to go to university in Paris. She fell in love with the squire's eldest son, Changsimir. When they planned to get married, they were opposed by the man's parents. The two old people knew that Madame Curie was intelligent and morally upright, but how could a poor female teacher marry her? The family's wealth and status matched each other. His father was furious, and his mother was looking for life and death. In the end, Chang Simil had no choice but to succumb to his parents' wishes.

The pain of lovelorn tortured Madame Curie, and she once had the idea of ????saying goodbye to the world. After all, Madame Curie was not an ordinary woman. In addition to her personal love, she also loved science and her relatives. So she put aside her romantic relationship, studied hard on her own, and helped the children of local poor farmers learn. A few years later, she had her last conversation with Chang Simmel, who was still so indecisive. She finally cut off the cord of love and went to study in Paris. This "lucky love break" is a loss. Without this loss, her history would be written in a different way, and there would be one less great scientist in the world.

The story of Madame Curie tells us that we must give up when it is time to give up. If we don’t put down the things in our hands, how can we free up our hands to pick up other things? God is stingy, and the Creator will not let a person put it down. All good things come to pass. Didn’t the ancients say that you can’t have your cake and eat it too? If you gain something, you’ll lose something. In this sense, any gain comes at the cost of loss. Someone once interviewed a successful person and asked her the secret to success. This person's answer was surprising. She said that her success was due to "loss".

Then she used her own experience to give the most vivid and concrete interpretation of this: In order to achieve career success, she lost a lot: a comfortable and worry-free life, a comfortable working environment, countless holidays, and even physical health and life safety? Life is short, if you want to gain more, you will lose more.

The great Russian poet Pushkin wrote in a poem: "Everything is temporary, everything will disappear, let the lost become lovely." Therefore, if we learn to get used to losing, we can often Gain from loss. Those who understand this principle and implement it are those who have grasped its essence. Then their lives will have fewer setbacks and more gains. The soul must move from childishness to maturity, from greed to broad-mindedness.

About Stories Containing Philosophical Principles 2

There is a joke like this. It is said that both the bee and the snail are pursuing the butterfly. Who does the butterfly choose in the end? Most people will say It's the bee, because the bee can fly with the butterfly, but in the end the butterfly chose the snail. Brother Bee was puzzled, so he went to ask Butterfly: "How am I inferior to him?" Butterfly replied: "Because Brother Snail at least has a house. At least I don't have to wander around, but I have to live with you." Group dormitory?.

Although it is just a joke, it presents the real life in today's society. Sometimes life feels like a helpless one. Once upon a time, Brother Bee might have complained about why his parents didn’t leave him a house; he might have complained that the times were advancing too fast and he was born at the wrong time; he might have complained that butterflies were too realistic and cruel; maybe...

Too many possibilities, too many complaints, too many emotions, maybe this is the so-called life.

Admittedly, objectively speaking, Butterfly’s choice was not wrong. She chose the life she needed. Every woman hopes to have a sense of belonging and a life of peace and contentment. Can Brother Bee give it? At least not yet. The old vows and the flowers before and under the moon may become insignificant in the face of marriage.

I don’t care about eternity, I only care about what I once had. Maybe this is the only sentence that can comfort the injured Brother Bee. I wonder if Brother Bee has awakened from the entanglement?

There are many people in situations like Brother Bee in life. I just want to say that men must Can be picked up and put down. Even if life is full of smoke, even if life is ruthless, a real man will not be surrendered.

I would like to dedicate this article to people who pursue happiness, and I also wish the snail and the butterfly a happy marriage!

About the story containing philosophical principles 3

Once upon a time, there was a big stone in the vegetable garden of a family. Not only does this stone prevent everyone from entering and exiting the vegetable garden, but people often trip over it and get injured.

One day, the son asked his father: "Dad, why don't we remove that nasty stone?"

The father replied: "That stone came from your grandfather's house." It has always been there! I don’t know how long it will take to move such a big stone. It’s a huge project!?

A few years later, this big stone still remains in place; and the son of that year is now He also married and had children.

One day, his son asked him the same question: Dad! That stone in the vegetable garden is an eyesore and dangerous, let’s move it away together!?

The father smiled and replied: "Forget it! That big stone is very heavy and it will be very difficult to move it! It has been in the garden since my grandfather's time. If it could be moved so easily, How could we let it stay until now?

However, this time the son did not give up. The next day, he went to the vegetable garden by himself and used a hoe to slowly loosen and dig up the soil around the big stone. Unexpectedly, the whole big stone became loose in just a short time. He quickly called for help and easily moved the stone away.

How do we know that things will turn out as we think without really trying? Sometimes what hinders us from discovering and creating is our own psychological default position.