The Richest Man In Babylon By George S Clason Chapter 7 - The Walls of Babylon Old Banzar, grim warrior of another day, stood guard at the passageway leading to the top of the ancient walls of Babylon. Up above, valiant defenders were battling to hold the walls. Upon them depended ihe future existence of this great city with its hundreds of thousands of citizens. Over the walls came the roar of the attacking armies, the yelling of many men, the trampling of thousands of horses, the deafening boom of the battering rams pounding the bronzed gates. In the street behind the gate lounged the spearmen, waiting to defend the entrance should the gates give way. They were but few for the task. The main armies of Babylon were with their king, far away in the east on the great expedition against the Elamites. No attack upon the city having been anticipated during their absence, the defending forces were small. Unexpectedly from the north, bore down ...





Rules are made by men, it is natural to get out of the rules in order to see clearly which parts of the rules needs to be changed. True talk.
ReplyDeleteSemiyu Olagolden
To circumvent a rule to bring a new product into being, that is called innovation
DeleteI think this is subjective and not typical to all rules.
ReplyDeleteThere are some things that you must observe the rule in other to create. Eg. You must observe the rule of heating for instance (if it needs 20 degrees of heat), and you want to produce a car body part through heating steam of an object, you must heat it to that 20degrees in other to produce an adequate product.
The old usually gives way to the new when it is tinkered with
Deletethat tinkering is going against the normal mill