| Re: More on : Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing? |
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Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile
Author: bigfletch8bigfletch8 Date: Sep 17, 2008 07:58
On Sep 14, 6:58Â pm, A Situation nothing.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 14 Sep 2008 09:41:47 +0100, "Giga"
>
> end)ho...@ yahoo.co> wrote:
>
>>Because 'nothing' can't exist.
>
> Yes it can. Of course 'nothing' implies non-existence,
> not just 'space'. Thus when considering 'nothing',
> existence cannot be included, or considered, as we
> have.
> As it is, I am daily surprised by there being 'something'.
> That's as close as I, with my constraints, can get to 'nothing'.
How much space represents space?
Nothing is solid, and yet you infer that 'thinginess' is.
The best the mind can come up with is 'something is nothing and
nothing is something'.This is because the mind is simply a binary code
at work.
Life is energy. We each are units of energy experienceing and moving
through the illusion of matter time and space.
Why? So we each learn our true individual nature. Beyond relativity.
A process of elimination. It takes time to see the illusion of time,
and vision to see the ongoing but temporal state of creation.
BOfL
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