postr/Stutter_remissionMarch 20, 2026

why today’s knowledge may not survive tomorrow. the evolving truth and why current knowledge is never the final answer

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why today’s knowledge may not survive tomorrow. the evolving truth and why current knowledge is never the final answer https://preview.redd.it/6wksatyip8qg1.jpg?width=1029&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8a4b01c696bdf6ddaca990be590a130a60aadc15 Speech therapy in the 1930s was already more developed than it had been in the 1900s. By the 1960s, treatment had become more specific and better defined than it was in the 1930s. The 1980s brought another step forward, with methods that were more advanced than those of the 1960s. In the 2000s, speech therapy moved ahead again, surpassing what was standard in the 1980s. The 2010s continued that progress, building on the work of the 2000s. The 2020s have taken it even further, with more knowledge, more tools, and more refined approaches than the 2010s. And the 2030s, 2040s, 2050s, and even 2090s will likely make today’s methods look limited by comparison. What feels true today may look outdated within a century. That is why knowledge should always be handled carefully, not worshipped blindly. Assume what you know may be incomplete or completely wrong. Question it, test it, and rebuild your view from the ground up. Real understanding begins when you stop treating current knowledge as final. Again.. future decades will likely make 2026 look primitive That is the lesson: today’s knowledge is not permanent truth. A century from now, perhaps many of it may sound like a fairy tale. Treat knowledge with caution. Question what you think you know. Begin analyzing from scratch

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