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  dao and natural law         


Author: shazi
Date: Dec 26, 2008 09:14

shazi asked:
>>are any natural laws 'absolute'?

noname replied:
>What makes you think there are natural laws
>that operate beyond the manifestation?
>I don't know and can't say.

well, i didn't say that i think
that there are natural laws that
operate beyond the manifestation.
hadn't even thought of that.

but now that you mention it,

are natural laws dao
or something associated with 10k?

-shazi
2 Comments
  Re: ANNOUNCE: exactphilosophy.net 2009         


Author: Hermes
Date: Dec 25, 2008 13:02

wanderriver wrote:
[...]
: > --http://www.exactphilosophy.net/
: > Something different...>>
:
: Enhanced, heck! I like the exactness of it. How cool is that! An
: exact philosophy! Does it have the number nine in it?

This place is the last one where I would have expected
someone to reply merely to the *name* of my site...

Take a look! :)

It is an interesting site for someone inclined towards
eastern philosophies...

It is written by an open minded physicist...

One of the ideas of my site has been cited in the journal
of chinese philosophy this year (see References)...

Sure, all the things above are just indirect indications,
but, remember, it was you who barked about the name... ;)

Thus you owe me a visit of at least nine minutes ;)

)o+
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18 Comments
  Canada lesbian couple         


Author: rafaelazuc
Date: Dec 25, 2008 06:23

couple de lesbienne cherche sex occasionnelle femme seulement
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1 Comment
  Christmas at graveyard         


Author: khtervola
Date: Dec 25, 2008 03:51

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqumx-a0jUY

It is good to think of life in its entirety when one celebrates.
1 Comment
  Re: The Emotional I Ching         


Author: noname
Date: Dec 25, 2008 03:33

"{:-])))" wuji.net> wrote:
>noname wrote:
>
>>Why do you assume that randomness exists?
>
>I would assume randomness exists as a practical matter
>if there is no way for me to predict an outcome or to
>see any fixed pattern. Shapes of clouds for instance.
>Dropping a box of sticks on the floor. Etc..
>Within various parameters, words point to something.

There are plenty of places your mind can be that prevent it from
seeing or acknowledging relationships. Lots of information that we
can claim not to have access to, and more available for the carving at
any time.
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1 Comment
  Re: The Emotional I Ching         


Author: noname
Date: Dec 25, 2008 03:26

"{:-])))" wuji.net> wrote:
> noname wrote:
>>Keynes earthlinkspam.net> wrote:
>>
>>>Not to put down considering the changes,
>>>I'd really rather not even take notice of them.
>>>The way of worldly thinking is constant change
>>>leading to thinking how do deal with each reversal.
>>>But centered in the now, there are no changes perceptible,
>>
>>Uh? No changes are perceptible?
>
>Centered in the now.
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11 Comments
  Re: The Emotional I Ching         


Author: chris
Date: Dec 25, 2008 00:49

On Dec 24, 11:28 pm, wanderriver hotmail.com> wrote:

>
> The un/subconscious is not on the look-out for number one, quite the
> contrary.
>

No. Primary emotions will look-out for No1 and cover your being a
particular of a species of primates. Stimulus/response is an immediate
act and its primitive forms are still with us. The development of...
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3 Comments
  Re: The Emotional I Ching         


Author: chris
Date: Dec 24, 2008 22:54

On Dec 24, 11:28 pm, wanderriver hotmail.com> wrote:
> Cr, imo, this is nothing new.  It has been going on since the
> beginning of time.  It's called tracking of the emotions.  People have
> been doing this forever.  That's how Freud was born.  People have
> always been interested in the emotional element in their lives.
> Nothing new.
>

Wrong - your showing your failure to think deeply and consider what is
being identified - or perhaps just ignorance of current work in
neurosciences.. Freud and all others worked in ad-hoc manners due to
total lack of understanding 'in here'. As such they created their own
languages to try and describe things and so created metaphors as rich
as this one covering the neurology at work but understanding of such
outside of the consciousness of the rabbi who interpreted sensations
as if 'angels' - http://members.iimetro.com.au/~lofting/myweb/angels.html
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3 Comments
  Lesbians cuple USA         


Author: rafaelazuc
Date: Dec 24, 2008 14:15

Lesbi cuple want sex right now http://lesbicouple.pornblink.com/
2 Comments
  Re: The Emotional I Ching         


Author: shazi
Date: Dec 24, 2008 09:44

jz wrote:
>noname wrote:
>
>>Why do you assume that randomness exists?
>
>I would assume randomness exists as a practical matter
>if there is no way for me to predict an outcome or to
>see any fixed pattern. Shapes of clouds for instance.
>Dropping a box of sticks on the floor. Etc..

in complex systems, individual events' outcome
are as random as can be. however, the distribution
of such seemingly random events is predictable.

i seem to be fixated upon flocks of birds for some reason.
the individual beating of the wings
may be considered random at least in smaller birds.
the tendency, however, of the flock to act as one
is very observable and predictable.
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41 Comments
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