macaco

DeRank : 15,22 • DeAge™ : 6130 days

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  • Here since 21 september 2008
Voto:
The first three paragraphs describe a hypothetical scenario of an ancient cataclysm that has decimated, if not annihilated, ancient civilizations.
Voto:
So many things to say, first of all, thank you for the dedication. I first encountered Koans at twenty. The (famous) one about the sound of one hand, I believe I have solved. It took nearly thirty years. I absolutely agree that the first change is internal; any effort aimed at changing or even criticizing the external is futile. The external is a mirror, the great deception of our time, and we always work on the effects and never on the causes.

The idea of being builders of reality, or rather co-creators, which arises from quantum mechanics, is fascinating but, as I understand it, unapplicable. But I have pushed further; my goal is to reach a theory of everything through the legacy of certain personalities. A theory that embraces the physics of the visible and the invisible, the cosmos, life, and man. In a few months, I will bring something to these pages.
Voto:
The first sentence is a quote you stole from your mariagiovanna plant.
Voto:
It's difficult to assess your writing without having seen the film.
I can't find any moral justification for the clubbing.
Voto:
Who knows what Prigogine would say... maybe he would have a good laugh. Some of Nolan's films give me labyrinthitis.
Voto:
Ancient Egypt is a source of great knowledge and unsolved mysteries, which, for reasons I ignore, are underestimated by official Egyptology. If I had to give an interpretation to the quote: "Better is bread of flour and water with a loving heart than rich foods with disputes and discord," it would certainly not be of a moral nature but rather "energetic." I know little about the various lineages and believe that the Egyptians were heirs to a knowledge of older civilizations, although their forward momentum in the civilizing process is undeniable; in this regard, the figure of Akhenaten stands out as the first monotheist. The author is unknown to me.
Voto:
Minchi, the scene where they have sex with the child under the bed is a classic.
Voto:
In his biography, Tesla recounts an anecdote to highlight his obsession with leaving nothing unfinished. He started reading Voltaire, only to discover it was the first of a hundred volumes. Once he finished, he declared he would never want to hear about it again.
I am a bit like that too, yet it was actually a book by Sartre that I dropped almost immediately. I didn't know he had also written plays. Rece molto capish.
Voto:
Great proposal.