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Originally Posted by N0B0DY Fredrick, Not that I wouldn't be honored to be on your team, but I'm of an opposite view. It goes against my religion, so to speak. I don't think there are such things as tangible things, and that assumes an opposite stance of pretty much everybody. I think space, particles, energy, etc., are created by the subconscious mind as a particular set of parameters and that the conscious mind is the scientist/mathematician.
I like your model, and entertain your ideas with mine, because there is an abstract aspect to it. Nevertheless it represents a particular functioning and format that has to fit into my own understanding of things so I questioned the dna and colors to get an idea of how they arise, if not from a division of the accumulated or unified whole. The four colors or four bases have to consist of something which consists of something else which consists of something else, in order for them to be relative. In the context of this thread, relative is the opposite of absolute - http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/relative - and therefore the colors and bases can't be considered primary or intrinsic. When I asked for the reason why primary colors are primary, I don't want to know why they would be independent of the color name tag or independent of all colors, but if one particular shade is primary or not. What do the colors consist of? |
You have many good questions to ask, Nobody, and I wish I could answer them all and remain sane. I have to pick just a few, and mention that I did not come up with the name primary colors nor will I be able to tell you who made them. In this regards I am a Hindu, living in a universe that is truly result-based only. The origin is not part of our universe. What I do find is a set of positions, and when I break down all available positions to just the remaining fundamental positions, I find a pyramid (of positions).
I have no problems with your religion that all is based on none. As long as we agree on the order we see around ourselves, we still have the same goal. I'd like you on the team, but maybe we are all too individualistic to find common grounds/goals. Religion is a freedom, an automatic freedom that comes as part of our universe. If there were no freedom, even the abstract concept (of whatever) could not exist. And I am sure you recognize where freedom exists in
Relative v. Absolute.
I am sorry for not being able to do more with a pyramid of Space, but the intangible needs to be placed in opposition to the tangible. Matter is the opposite of Space (though Matter takes in Space, and Space exists even without Matter). The average color in the pyramid of color is not white, black, green, yellow, red, or blue; it is gray. Gray is the average standard of our universe. Not the most thrilling color, and not even solid ground, but I think that is the standard.
I am currently communicating with a Nobel Prize winner about the pyramid. I won one round of mind games, but now I am introducing the model (together with Austin's graphics of bottom view and top view). I don't give myself much chance I'll be able to show him how the model works (the required thinking is somewhat different from how physicists think. Position? How do you mean position?), but keep your fingers crossed.