| Re: The importance of a theory To make the theory as simple as possible without surrendering a single experience. Hey I like that MJA! It's just like one says, "the simplest explanation is also the most complex"
The simplest explanation for the universe, that is also the most complex, is a representation, a symbol, of two circles interlocking. This is the simplest way to complex all the complex information it takes to create the universe. It's like I took my discovery down to the professors and they said it was some very complex geometry. I said, this isn't complex, this it's simple as hell. I asked them to guess what kind of field it would produce and they all guessed it wrong. Ha ha ha, shows how much they don't know yet.
It's just like you say MJA, everything represents equality. It's just like one says, "equality is the greatest quantity." Equality is that greatest asolute mathematic value that renders positive infinity and negative infinity equal for a split moment of eternal splendor.
It isn't just equal, it is unequal in an equal way. It shares the similarity of exact difference. It is the coincidence of opposites as nikolas cusa called them. It is the interplay of two things that are exactly the same, but exactly opposite. It isn't just a contradiction, it is also consistent too. It is the irony of truth and true paradox. It is going from being at the mercy of nature one moment, to suddenly being at it's control. And if you look at the state of the world, it doesn't have to be this way forever. The power of a theory is that it lets us know what we cannot know - that which constantly changes.
So think about this MJA. Think about the symbol of two circles interlocking representing the same thing as the equals sign. Only imagine that the interlocking circles represents everything in a very dynamic and representative way. It is a symbol of the ancients, but you probably saw it today if you used a credit card, smoked a cigarette, or rocked out to your yoga booty ballett. It is the definition of the undefined number in mathematics, that which allows us to know what we cannot know. It is the simplest explanation that also holds the most complex translation. It's just like einstein said. Thanks for the quote MJA, and keep on telling the people about equality, and equality is a dynamic state of change where it is always unbalanced in a perfectly balanced way. |