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The three wise monkeys at the Tōshō-gū shrine in Nikkō, Japan. The three wise monkeys are a Japanese pictorial maxim, embodying the proverbial principle "see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil". [1] The three monkeys are Mizaru (見ざる), "does not see", covering his eyes; Kikazaru (聞かざる), "does not hear", covering his ears
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Gandhi's Three Monkeys is a series of sculptures created in 2008 by Indian artist Subodh Gupta that portrays three heads in different types of military headgear. The sculptures recall a visual metaphor from India's famous champion of peace, Mahatma Gandhi, of the "Three wise monkeys", representing the principle "see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil".
See No Evil, a 2003 book by former CIA case officer Robert Baer; See No Evil (The Hardy Boys), a 1987 Hardy Boys Casefiles novel; See No Evil - The Backstage Battle Over Sex and Violence on Television, by Geoffrey Cowan, 1979; See No Evil: The Existence of Sin in an Age of Relativism, by Harry Lee Poe, 2004
3 Monkeys or Three Monkeys may refer to: Three wise monkeys, pictorial maxim, embodying "see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil", also associated with Mahatma Gandhi; Three Monkeys (film), a 2008 Turkish film; 3 Monkeys, a 2020 Indian Telugu-language comedy drama film; 3 Monkeys (upcoming film), an upcoming Indian Hindi-language heist thriller
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Then the monkey father learned agriculture and, after a good harvest, could finally feed all his children. As they fed on the cereals, the monkeys gradually lost their hair and their tails. They also started to use bone and stone implements, then made clothes and built houses, forming a civilization from which the Tibetan people descended.
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