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@keithprosser
Hey keith gus agrees, leave me out. LOL
I've not said that it's irrelevant to you or anyone else. I said that it's irrelevant to me because it is. I don't concern myself with "how."
I'm not sure I understand you. What do you mean, you don't "concern" yourself with how?'
Do you see God, hear God, feel God, or what? Why are you being evasive? It's pretty straightforward. There are very few means of perception.
Do you think the world would be a better place of societies followed the laws of nature?
and what if parts of those laws were numerical?for instance, what if we created our buildings in accordance to natural numeric harmonic laws?
I think the ancient Egyptians conformed to natural and spiritual laws
if indeed they are even different,
through ritual,temple dimensions and alignments,music,art etc. I believe this is why they were able to keep their civilization going for three thousand or more years. I don't think their society was ideal, but I think it was kept in some semblance of civilized order for millenia. I am currently researching this theory, although I can't recall at the moment where I learned about it. For instance, their music and art had to legally conform to specific standards. I am sure their buildings and temples did as well. I am unable to confirm this idea at the moment, but I am finding it fascinating to research.
I apologize if my phrase appeared to be antsy! It wasn't my intention. I only meant I am unsure if natural and spiritual law are different.
Perhaps spiritual laws are in place to counteract the unfeeling and uncompromising natural laws. Which is pretty much what you said, and makes sense
Perhaps spiritual laws are in place to counteract the unfeeling and uncompromising natural laws.
How can that be? Mathematics is make-believe.
How can you be so certain that these principles were used if they're imaginary?
Aren't you just looking at a proverbial inkblot of matter and "naming" it a "computer" and saying that you "used mathematical principles"? What use does your imagination have in anything other than perpetuating the unjustifiable folly of your imagination?
Imaginary and purely abstract concepts can demonstrate nothing--nothing physical or material at least.
They don't exist, right? How does the nonexistent interact with and influence the existent and vice versa?
Is there a nexus? Who or what is this nexus? And what does that mean for the nexus? Does it exist or does it not exist? Or is it entirely irrelevant?
Do you?Do you believe in solipsism?
One could easily and logically conclude that all knowledge is insignificant.
Abstract, not concrete
Because they are logically coherent and verifiable.
When abstract concepts demonstrate practical application, this proves their efficacy.
You observe water running down a hill.
You form a hypothesis "perhaps I can divert that water by digging a canal". Then you test that hypothesis.
Things in your imagination do not exist in a real, concrete and verifiable manner.
There is a very clear difference between what is concrete and what is abstract.
Apparently your brain can make useful predictions. These predictions are not real, but are instead ABSTRACT and IMAGINARY.
Do you believe in solipsism?
(IFF) substance dualism is true (THEN) natural and supernatural cannot possibly interact (THEREFORE) de facto monism is true.I've been having an internal debate for years with dualism, but have yet to come to a resolution.
(IFF) substance dualism is true (THEN) natural and supernatural cannot possibly interact (THEREFORE) de facto monism is true.(IFF) natural and supernatural CAN interact (THEN) substance dualism is FALSE (THEREFORE) monism is true.
Things in your imagination do not exist in a real, concrete and verifiable manner.Are we modifying our description of existence now? If they don't exist in a "real, concrete, and verifiable manner," then do they exist at all?
Sustaining the aforementioned statements you brought up, what is the epistemological significance in differentiating "concrete" and "abstract" as it concerns existence?
I'm not suggesting that abstract imagination is "nothingness".
I'm simply making the definition of "exist" explicitly (scientifically) verifiable and real (not imaginary or abstract).
It's a practical distinction, not a fundamental distinction.
Elaborate. If abstract and concrete are distinctions, what would you call the fundamental "substance" to which they both belong? If existence, according to you, indicates the concrete, and imaginary indicates the abstract, then what do you call that which encapsulates them both?It's just like the practical distinction between "red" and "blue".
It's just like the practical distinction between "red" and "blue".Elaborate. If abstract and concrete are distinctions, what would you call the fundamental "substance" to which they both belong? If existence, according to you, indicates the concrete, and imaginary indicates the abstract, then what do you call that which encapsulates them both?