There are books on any idea you can imagine. — Gregory
You bring up an interesting point which applies to eymology. All too often a scholar will believe a coincidence to be something casual instead. Have you ever researched aliens and what the probability is that they exist? I mean actually to put a percent on the likelihood they are here and have visited earth. Once we break things down technically like that, it's not hard to see that finding causality in these matters is far harder than one might initially think. — Gregory
Littlewood's law states that a person can expect to experience events with odds of one in a million (defined by the law as a "miracle") at the rate of about one per month. — Wikipedia
Apophenia (/æpoʊˈfiːniə/) is the tendency to mistakenly perceive connections and meaning between unrelated things. — Wikipedia
DNA language makes up for 64 possibilities, as do I Ching hexagrams. — Noble Dust
The West dismisses its own adage, "As above, so below." as mere superstition, but the self-sameness at different levels of fractals falls out of the mathematics of self- referential definition and reiteration (change). — unenlightened
thought they lost the war because they didn't consult I Ching. — Gregory
No, that is not true, if I Ching can HELP a party to a victory. — god must be atheist
I have a book which argues that the Bible originated in India and another book that says it originated in China. — Gregory
I have a book which argues that the Bible originated in India and another book that says it originated in China. — Gregory
The thing about religious people — Gregory
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