Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Deep question to chew on

Anyone here familiar with Jung's theories on synchronicity? My knowledge is pretty spotty.

Antway, I was wondering, how do Einstein's theories of relativity affect Jungian philosophy? According to new quantum theory, the perception of time as a continuous series of synchronous discrete event-moments is just a figment of our imagination, and time is really a static matrix like the cartesian dimensions of, of which we can only perceive or "see" one point at a time.

If this were true, how does this effect the concepts of cause and effect in the Jungian scheme? Simple cause and effect relationships rely on our quite possibly flawed perception of time as a sequence of discrete events. If time is not this, than what is the relationship between causal events and their ensuing effects?

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Time is created out of Eternity
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He was so smart that we are only now being able to test his theroms. E=MC2
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Quote:
Originally posted by Paladin
He was so smart that we are only now being able to test his theroms. E=MC2

His genius was such that we are now only beginning to scrape the tip of the iceberg as to the implications of that equation (I think its real cool that they can teleport a ray of light now).

And how long before someone of even higher genius figures out what he missed? Or what he couldn't see?
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tasty!
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Quote:
Originally posted by Paladin
And how long before someone of even higher genius figures out what he missed? Or what he couldn't see?
Stephen Hawking is one of those geniuses.
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Quote:
Originally posted by coleslaw
Quote:
Originally posted by Paladin
And how long before someone of even higher genius figures out what he missed? Or what he couldn't see?
Stephen Hawking is one of those geniuses.

Really? What corrections has he found necessary? I thought he was just fleshing out Einstein's theories further.
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Originally posted by zenbooty
And how long before someone of even higher genius figures out what he missed? Or what he couldn't see?

Like the military didn't have a fully working model of relativity for the last 40 yrs; they've been keepin' it a secret all this time. Or do you think all the UFOs are just a bunch of fairies?
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believe it or not, one of my friends uncles is working on a book thats going to try and prove (well not prove but theorize) parts of Einstein theory wrong.
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Space travel has probably been possible for many years...
Probably.
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Quote:
Originally posted by coleslaw
Quote:
Originally posted by Paladin
And how long before someone of even higher genius figures out what he missed? Or what he couldn't see?
Stephen Hawking is one of those geniuses.

damn renaissance man....Stephen hawking's smart, good looking, and he even raps. someone post that link again please. Is he out with an album yet?

oh and he's probably freakin fast in that wheelchair. must pickup all the chicks.
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Do pets speak in english when we are asleep?
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I was lucky enough to meet hawking at ucsb, he was there talking about string theory. I got a picture with him too, too bad he couldn't sign it.
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Quote:
Originally posted by chosenfool
wow...i would gladly have my picture taken with him than with steven tyler...

hey, hapoo, couldnt he have licked the pic for you?

heh heh

Too funny.
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Quote:
Originally posted by chosenfool
wow...i would gladly have my picture taken with him than with steven tyler...

hey, hapoo, couldnt he have licked the pic for you?

heh heh


Actually since his disease has progress I don't think he cant do that either, but he could drool on it, or gimme his thumb print

Its sad that such a brilliant mind has to have such a debilitating disease, but then again it does allow him lots and lots of time to think. Why is it all the true geniuses die young or have some problem??


Mavi forum

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