RoseMontague
Published Author
Feynman appeared in a few comic strips over the years.
Hans, do the research if you do not believe me. Google is your friend.
It looks as though you've either misinterpreted, or incorrectly summed up the research that's available. It's easily done.
I am open to a better interpretation or summary. Waiting.
Well, my understanding is that according to some theories, time is just another dimension, so could move either forwards or backwards.
However, entropy means that it only ever moves forwards.
The point I believe Hans was making about time starting some time after the big bang is just a paradox (I was going to say tautologically incorrect, but I don't think that makes any sense).
My understanding of this is entirely that of a layperson, the SMMT forum is the place to get answers from experts.
That'd be the Wathan Generator that the Ethicals installed on Earth about a million years ago.The population of the world has been growing for centuries. Where do all the new souls come from?
Or advanced technology, such as a Wathan Catcher.How do the souls migrate over the vast distances in the universe? That would seem to require magic.
Hans, do the research if you do not believe me. Google is your friend.
Here is a Google search on Quantum physics time moves both ways.
http://www.google.com/search?client...es+both+ways&sourceid=opera&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8
I am open to a better interpretation or summary. Waiting.
A lot of people (especially skeptics) repeat the mantra that anecdotes are not evidence. But clearly they are. The problem is the conclusions, not whether or not anecdotes are evidence. The incidents you described may very well have occurred. But the conclusions people draw from such personal experiences are often flawed.I want to explore this a little further.
In early Novemeber of 2008 I was in New York and ate lunch at a Macdonalds in lower Manhatten.
What sort of corroborating evidence would you be willing to accept as proof that this actually occured?
I want to explore this a little further.
In early Novemeber of 2008 I was in New York and ate lunch at a Macdonalds in lower Manhatten.
What sort of corroborating evidence would you be willing to accept as proof that this actually occured?
I want to explore this a little further.
In early Novemeber of 2008 I was in New York and ate lunch at a Macdonalds in lower Manhatten.
What sort of corroborating evidence would you be willing to accept as proof that this actually occured?
And in fact, it isn't true. I wasn't in any bar on Saturday.
What I believe is that your concscious awareness was not attending to the threat. Some part of your cognitive apparatus became aware of the threat, and of the need to bring the matter to your conscious attention promptly. The thought adopted the form of a crisp instruction spoken in a familiar friendly voice. You then experienced your thought as a sensory event. That has happened often enough to other people (me, for example), so why not you?
You have a personal experience, refuse to entertain any rational explanation for it
and then conclude that the world is irrational.
There are two answers given now. Anyone else?
Do you know of any literature on this proposed idea?
With this hindsight humanity is in a position to improve the lot of life or diminish it. To improve it is a gift and religions are systems of teaching this gift.
I don't "refuse to entertain any rational explaination", but neither will I accept a so called "rational explaination" which is clearly wrong to just satisfy other people's desires.
Consider this. You see a light moving back abd forth across the sky and don't know what it is. So you say, "hey I saw a strange light and I looked into it and it shouldn't have been there, so I think it was a UFO."
Now people use their skeptism and say "it was just Venus and clouds made it look like it was moving." Well that's rational right? But what if your light was to the north and Venus was to the south? Is it still rational? Should you accept it because it's a "rational explaination"?
Now let's take it further. Let's say that you start having more visits, right to the point of actually having a strange vehicle hovering 20m over your house before shooting up into the sky. Well you might have been halucinating, you might have just dreamed it, it might have been a huge helium balloon and yout friends were playing tricks on you. All these are "rational explainations" right? But why should you accept one of them as correct if none actually match your experience? Do you simply say, "Well my memory must be faulty and my brain playing up because rationally I know that Aliens don't exist" or do you accept what your experiences are telling you?
How many experiences do you need to have to go from "I have seen an unidentified Flying Object" to "I have seen an alien space craft"? At what point do you finally say, "hey perhaps I don't know everything and can't rationalise it all away afterall"? This is the thing, I haven't come to the conclusions I have based on a single event, but rather many, many events throughout my life.