eligion
woman
pesimism
depression
atheism
cause — Banno
Well, through air, the path is not a parabola actually. But it looks like one. The very concept of a parabola follows from math. There are no parabolas in nature. The water rays shot from fountains resemble parabolas but before we invented them, it was nowhere to be seen. They are imaginaries. Of course some natural phenomena have mathematical shapes, but do they have them because they have to follow it? — Haglund
I don't think that's correct. But scientists and philosophers both have long noticed the uncanny relationship between maths and the world, going back to the Pythagoreans (and probably before.) I've read a couple of books on it, Mario Livio - Is God a Mathematician? being one.
My view is that in some fundamental sense, number is real. Not that there aren't imaginary numbers and imaginary mathematical systems, as there surely are - but that in grasping mathematical truths, you're grasping something real, not subjective, not a product of the mind. Loosely speaking that is called mathematical platonism and it's a favourite subject of mine, although not being highly proficient at maths is a handicap. — Wayfarer
The parabola form is traced out by the stone. It's not there before. — Haglund
that's a matter of taste. — Haglund
you have just taken as gospel the very thesis whose credibility is in question, namely that every cause precedes its effect. — Bartricks
derived from empirical evidence and it's held up to scrutiny. — Agent Smith
This has already been referred to but it's always worth another mention, https://math.dartmouth.edu/~matc/MathDrama/reading/Wigner.html — Wayfarer
In my humble opinion, that's a matter of taste. Does the thrown stone follow the parabola or the parabola the stone? What comes first, the parabola or the trajectory? — Haglund
Question begging — Bartricks
Maslow territory. — Ansiktsburk
Hidden within those intricate folds are the secrets of the universe. — jgill
Well, maybe not. :sad: — jgill
For if the light of reason uncovers disturbing truths, one solution is to turn off that light. — Art48
I don't know. He probably was familiar with it, being a well-educated urbane sophisticated crackpot. Were you planning on suing Freud's estate for copyright infringement of Socrates' ideas? — Bitter Crank
Freud's psychodynamic system is too rococo to be tied to any single source. I don't think he cooked up the oedipal conflict and penis envy after reading Sophocles' plays. Besides, he was wrong about penis envy. Men have penis envy, not women. (see the scholarly work of M. Python, Biggus Dickus) — Bitter Crank
Man is something to be surpassed — Jack Cummins
Blues music is an aesthetic device of confrontation and improvisation — 180 Proof
Why would self creation be impossible then? What's the asymmetry? — Haglund
Emotional Intelligence (Ability Model):
1.Perceiving emotions – the ability to detect and decipher emotions in faces, pictures, voices, and cultural artifacts—including the ability to identify one's own emotions. Perceiving emotions represents a basic aspect of emotional intelligence, as it makes all other processing of emotional information possible.
2. Using emotions – the ability to harness emotions to facilitate various cognitive activities, such as thinking and problem-solving. The emotionally intelligent person can capitalize fully upon his or her changing moods in order to best fit the task at hand.
3. Understanding emotions – the ability to comprehend emotion language and to appreciate complicated relationships among emotions. For example, understanding emotions encompasses the ability to be sensitive to slight variations between emotions, and the ability to recognize and describe how emotions evolve over time.
4. Managing emotions – the ability to regulate emotions in both ourselves and in others. Therefore, the emotionally intelligent person can harness emotions, even negative ones, and manage them to achieve intended goals. — Wikipedia
Understandable. But what if I do not want to pray at all? I no longer believe in future or luck either fortuna. I think life tend to be difficult and painful for us, full of uncertainty.
This uncertainty make us to find different paths to survive. You choose religion but I do not choose anything — javi2541997
Chance favors the prepared mind. — Louis Pasteur
Freud — Bitter Crank
You are not referring to Higgs boson, which took the nickname "God particle", are you? — Alkis Piskas
