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Michelle Cha Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

I don't know what the writer want to say.

"Problems are the bane of our existence. Yet we all get through them-one way or the other. We know that, if it were not for problems, we would not grow and prosper. Problems offer us mental, physical, and social challenges that shape our character and our destiny. Problems are at the heart of all progress-material, cultural, spiritual, and physical. So what is the problem? The problem is what to do with problems. That’s a choice and that choice is both a curse and a blessing. The curse is that there are problems; the blessing is that problems have solutions. Finding the solutions that manifest the consequences you need is a long journey."



The above is from the book I study. I don't really get the poit or the writer's view.

What does he argue? What is the key sentence?



As always , thank you very much native teachers.

  

Top answer

Michelle Cha I don't really get the point or the writer's view. The writer's thesis is that solving problems is the best thing for humans. If we didn't have any problems, we would not have any challenges.

  • Michelle Cha I don't really get the point or the writer's view.
  • The writer's thesis is that solving problems is the best thing for humans.
  • If we didn't have any problems, we would not have any challenges.
  • There would be no progress.
  • org/us/dictionary/learner-english/complacent .
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1 Answers
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Michelle ChaI don't really get the point or the writer's view.

The writer's thesis is that solving problems is the best thing for humans.
If we didn't have any problems, we would not have any challenges. There would be no progress. Everyone would just be lazy and

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