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  • Here since 21 september 2008
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Nice review and interesting points; could it be that they owe something to Stockhausen?
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What more can I say?
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Friulian, precisely Aviano (PN), so half Venetian. Now also half Brazilian, thank God!
MoRkObOt MoRtO
1 feb 09
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Well, one thing I'm sure of here in Recife is that there's no way they'll come. By the way, here we have Iron Maiden and also Alanis Morissette, what a drag!
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Beautiful, smooth, and with historical hints, this way I also learn something.
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Strangely interesting, I’ll try to listen to these as well, poor my ears! @Aragna_com_7_pernas: we already know about Zu, there’s even the review.
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Great review and recommendation, I've never heard of him, I'm ignorant.
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Alright, I'll pass by here too; I found the review a bit strange, perhaps because I've never read the book. However, considering that many have done so, your approach is proving interesting, not like the executioner who just recounted the plot of Moby Dick. Then again, it's clear you're a bit of a "sgaggio," and I had already noticed that. Tchau!
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Of course you're a nice guy! I even like you. "Astounded" is a term I wrote spontaneously with no negative connotation; I could have written "amazed," yes, truly based on what you write and even more so on how you do it, and then reading your comment 147 creates a strong contrast that highlights your thoughts even more. I don’t think that knowledge usurps wisdom, as I too am thirsty for knowledge, yet as time goes by I realize that it’s like trying to enter a fractal; we uselessly delve into details only to find even more equally detailed particulars. For me, this is a great example of divine language. Naturally, without my curiosity pushing me towards knowledge, I would have never found this signal. Signals indeed, we should learn to recognize them, without studying them, developing our sensitivity and faith; yes, this is a great mystery that no knowledge can reveal to us. Yet we cannot give up; what are the years, what is a life? And here I feel like talking to you about my "new" religion, but it’s already late and it’s not that easy. Bye!
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I am really happy because with a little comment I managed to steer the discussion from religion to sex (the primal instinct). Anyway, seriously speaking, Syderus, you leave me astounded; today I had the chance to read your comments more thoroughly and also discover something about your personal life. Have you ever thought that our knowledge, that our studies give us so little? In the end, what do we gain from knowing the entire Bible, the Quran, the Torah, the Gita, etc.? I tried to read the Bible as I would read a novel, with no pretensions, and I didn't like it. I realized that I don't need it; what I need is extremely concise yet immensely complex: to love God above all things and to love my neighbor as myself. These are two conditions to achieve moral perfection, and perhaps even earthly happiness. How great is the distance between knowledge and wisdom?