• Jack Cummins
    5.3k

    Nowhere and no man's land
    Opposite to something
    There is nothing to say about nothing
    Hopping around looking for what can't be found
    Is there any potential in the void?
    No clear explantions about nothing
    Got to find a path back to the reality of existence
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Let me take you down
    'Cause I'm going to
    strawberry fields
    Nothing is real
    And nothing to get hung about
    ...
    Nothing to do to save his life
    call his wife in
    Nothing to say
    but what a day
    how's your boy been

    Nothing to do
    it's up to you
    I've got nothing to say
    but it's OK
    There's nothin' you can do
    that can't be done
    Nothin' you can sing
    that can't be sung
    Nothin' you can say
    but you can learn how to play the game
    It's easy

    Nothin' you can make
    that can't be made
    No one you can save
    that can't be saved
    Nothin' you can do
    but you can learn how to be you in time
    It's easy

    There's nothin' you can know
    that isn't known
    Nothin' you can see
    that isn't shown
    There's nowhere you can be
    that isn't where you're meant to be
    It's easy
    And the Walrus sings "Here's another clue for you all ..." :victory: :smirk:
  • Agent Smith
    9.5k
    @Jack Cummins @180 Proof

    Brilliant, the both of you!

    180 Proof got mathematical (0), but the two of you eventually ended up in the world of poetry - Jack Cummins' is an original (way to go! Jack) and 180 Proof's looks like it was authored by someone else (perhaps a poet I've not heard of).

    Mathematics: There are two kinds of nothing in math viz. Zero, 0 and the Null set, { }. Here's a syntactically and semantically sound set: {0}. Note: {0} treats nothing as something (Greeks never got past that hurdle. The Indians managed to do so, Brahmagupta was one of the pioneers of mathematics with zero).

    The usual state of affairs with minds: We're constantly thinking about something; {I'm hungry}, {Sex}, {daughter}, {Gödel's Incompleteness Theorems}, you get the idea. Zen Buddhism, an amalgamation of Buddha & Lao Tzu (compatible, interesting, oui?), is famous for it's mindblowing Koans. The idea, as some say, is to empty the mind and what better way to do that than to make the practitioner contemplate on contradictions ( +x & -x = 0), let the two halves of an antinomy cancel each other out and what's left is this: { } aka, if I'm correct, mushin no shin (mind without mind) or shoshin (beginner's mind).

    What sayest thou?
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