USSRGirl wrote:>.< No. Because I say it tastes of evil. And everyone is entitled to my opinion.
starfire wrote:Well, despite the fact that too much tv destroys imagination
Bobtheduck wrote:I hope you're being sarcastic... This is just not true.
starfire wrote:I think one of the most common forms of escapism is daydreaming. If I didn't daydream, I'd go nuts too. Just from the sheer mundaneness of life. It's nice to be able to escape into a fantasy world every so often.
Bobtheduck wrote:I hope you're being sarcastic... This is just not true. The idea that comic books, TV, and video games destroy your imagination... That is truly an archaic paranoia that should have died out once two entire generations had grown up with TV (before that there were enough who didn't watch TV to count against that), and probably 3 generations in Japan had grown up with comic books...
starfire wrote:Well, despite the fact that too much tv destroys imagination .
UC Pseudonym wrote:I agree with your post almost in full, but I do feel as though I should state one thing. While television is not the death of imagination, it certainly can be. There are many children I know who think about everything in terms of their favorite television shows and movies, and cannot do much of anything that isn't based on them. Of course, this could just as easily happen with literature (and it does).
Wakarimashta! wrote:TV has contributed mostly to my imagination. Tthe characters I see there inspire me to create something "better" than somebody elses.
mitsuki lover wrote:When I watch Inuyasha I am always asking questions like these:
*When those this occur?
*What was happening in Europe at the time?
*Which of my ancestors would have been alive then?
*What if Kagome,Inuyasha,et al met someone from Europe?
*Was this before or during the time when the Jesuits arrived?
*Would Kagome,Inuyasha,et al have met any of the new converts
to Catholicism in their travels?
things like that.
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