My thinking was more that one can recover linear time from the cyclic times of many bodies. — Kenosha Kid
Do you mind explaining a little bit more about your visions etc.? I'm quite interested in hearing more. — Yozhura
clairvoyant — Jack Cummins
Minkowski is flat spacetime. In general relativity, it is spacetime that is curved, not just space, so, yes, time is curved as well. — Kenosha Kid
I am an explorer of consciousness — Jack Cummins
I think mysticism is a the atrophied tail of philosophy. — Jack Cummins
"When I fail in my duty, I readily acknowledge it, saying, I am used to do so. I shall never do otherwise if I am left to myself. If I fail not, then I give God thanks acknowledging that it comes from Him" — PTPG
I don't believe you have discovered for yourself that suffering pushes you towards God. — unenlightened
One theory is that people naturally become more religious as they age (more suffering) and approach their own mortality.
I don't. — unenlightened
So I will repeat what has been quoted and further indicated in all three cases as a direct and solemn warning that to attempt to understand anything of this with thought alone is worse than useless, positively injurious. If you do not sense the significance of the topic, leave it alone for it will only confuse you. — unenlightened
Possibly. I should have known better than to quote him at the top. Ok, Krishnamurti was a charlatan or an idiot or a lunatic. Now go read the God stuff chaps! — unenlightened
Yes. Krishnamurti at least, rejects authority, including his own, in favour of a scientific approach. Do it for yourself, and find out for yourself. Don't rely on reports from anyone else. But added to this is the rejection of the thinking brain as the agent of transformation, and this latter is very much common ground with the Christian mystics cited above. Thus...
For whoso heareth this work either be read or spoken of, and weeneth that it may, or should, be come to by travail in their wits, and therefore they sit and seek in their wits how that it may be, and in this curiosity they travail their imagination peradventure against the course of nature, and they feign a manner of working the which is neither bodily nor ghostly—truly this man, whatsoever he be, is perilously deceived.
— Cloud, 82 — unenlightened
If I understand your analogy correctly, a physician loses power of all consequence when a disease becomes incurable - but the intent to save the patient in question sustains. Is that it? — Aryamoy Mitra
I have no beef with him personally. But just as I don't have the right personality for being a mod, neither does he, imho.
My last comment on the matter. Made my suggestion, said my peace, on to the next thread. — Hippyhead
Imho, being bored by nukes is the pinnacle of the insanity. — Hippyhead
So it's not news that aiming nuclear weapons at each other is an act of insanity — Hippyhead
The wine tasted like wine and the supper tasted like fish and chips. What's missing that can't be put into words? — Isaac
If you are walking along a cycle that’s big enough and you are small enough the cycle appears a straight line. — Benj96
Money used to have value in gold. Nowadays that is not the case. Global economy is based on the sole reason that we give value to money. Binary 1 means money has value, binary 0 means it has no value. We are just printing money these days. — Yozhura
cannot be adequately described in words, but they can be evoke — Olivier5
real criticism is required; not acceptance — J. Krishnamurti
Exactly, now we are making everything as small as possible. Back then humans tried to create structures as big as possible. — Yozhura
Yes I would. I would then choose a worthy human to give it to. Unless giving it away means using it. — Yozhura
If instead of a zombie, Dennett was a culinary critic with a gift for wordsmithing, he could make an attempt at it. — Olivier5
Ignorance. — Pinprick
double negatives — Pinprick
Because “not wanting” is not an action. — Pinprick
If the parts of the brain that process "redness" decay, break, or lose functionality, then yes. — Philosophim
My mother's taste in colors have changed over the years. — Philosophim
Cerebral achromatopsia — Philosophim
Tower of Babel — Jack Cummins
In perspective geometry, the infinite is brought to a finite piece of paper when two parallel straights are drawn for example :) — KerimF