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Re: Is Life An Absolute Principle?
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Lloyd Gillespie
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Re: Is Life An Absolute Principle? - 01-28-2007, 11:35 PM

All I see is you absolutely admit you have no facts, only emotional conjectures, of the lowest orders. It would be nice to see you back up just one of your conjectures with a few physical facts...

Let's see, if I strip away the encoded emotions; Motion is universal, within the physical universe. The principle of life is expressed in motion. True enough, now...

But is life an absolute principle, i.e., fundamentally eternal? If you say yes, where's the facts of such outrageous conjecture? I must state, it's been rejected by most of the world's most brilliant philosophers, for almost a century, and by many others for over two centuries. Only mystics, believing in their inner selfish self-reflective egos, still believe in such nonsense. Science knows the difference between self-reflective egoistic nonsense, and the physical facts of the outside world. It's easy, when you realize the inner being is no more than a self-created soul, mind and spirit ego illusion, sprinkled with some moral sensibilities, but not much...

regards,

p.s.
"Morality is your prejudices learned by age 18." Nietzsche
"Morality is created as you see others, see you." My wife.


"To develop the skill of correct thinking is in the first place to learn what you have to disregard. In order to go on, you have to know what to leave out; this is the essence of effective thinking." Kurt Godel
"Time and space are modes in which we think and not conditions in which we live." Albert Einstein
"The uncertainty principle is an absolute, finite, universal constant." L.G.
"The tick-tick-tick of the cesium atom is a sliding-time-scaler constant of all finite universal motion." L.G.
  
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