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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 5:50:01 PM   
GoddessImaginos


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I think it may be about time for a Dumb Joke (that everyone's probably heard already, but hey, maybe it will get Me stared at sternly or something..): it's the one about the dyslexic agnostic who lies awake at night wondering if there really IS a Dog..
DISCLAIMER: all Ppersons working around the issue of dyslexia, please take no offense at My silly BS!

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 5:51:00 PM   
Elipsis


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No.  Atheism is not a religion.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 6:03:03 PM   
kittinSol


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Elipsis

No.  Atheism is not a religion.


Bingo. Thank you.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 6:21:20 PM   
Cipherx


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It depends on your definition of religion.  In the usual sense, religion is the belief in some kind of a diety.  There is a church that was started to give them the same rights as religions.  According to government rules they did whatever was required for recognition as a religion for tax purposes.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 7:06:42 PM   
ThatDamnedPanda


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

*Staring at all of you sternly.*


That's incredibly sexy, you know.


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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 7:51:33 PM   
kittinSol


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quote:

ORIGINAL: ThatDamnedPanda

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

*Staring at all of you sternly.*


That's incredibly sexy, you know.



I know. I can do better, too, if you like  (Panda's one of my favourites *whack whap slap bam*.)

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 10:05:43 PM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

I think part of the issue is a confusion about who we are exactly talking about.

For myself, I'll define the terms a little more closely.

In general, when I am discussing "atheists", I am talking about people in the Western, Christian tradition who do not believe in God.

Buddhist, for example, can be considered atheists, but that tradition hasn't been part of the mainstream Western culture.

Firm


Your engaging in the no true Scotsman fallacy.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/11/2009 11:49:05 PM   
ThatDamnedPanda


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

quote:

ORIGINAL: ThatDamnedPanda

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

*Staring at all of you sternly.*


That's incredibly sexy, you know.



I know. I can do better, too, if you like  (Panda's one of my favourites *whack whap slap bam*.)


You give great sound effect! Between that and the stern stares, I am totally yours, ma'am.


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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 7:51:00 AM   
Aswad


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NihilusZero,

I decided to forego quoting, as it lent itself to a less constructive and unintentionally antagonistic style of reply (I wrote a quoted draft and discarded it for this reason upon reviewing). Let me start by explaining my position in somewhat more verbose terms, hopefully addressing some of the things that you contended and some of the things that you questioned in your post:
  • The basic sense of the word atheism (cf. Princeton, Wikipedia) is the belief in the absence or non-existence of gods.
  • The extended sense of the word atheism (cf. Princeton, Wikipedia) is the absence of belief in gods.
  • For all who identify as atheist, the truth value of one of the senses of the word- applied as a predicate- will evaluate true.
  • For most who identify as atheist, the truth value of the basic sense of the word- applied as a predicate- will evaluate true, while the extended predicate will evaluate false.
  • Not all for whom either predicate evaluates as true will identify as atheist.
  • Identifying as atheist is strongly correlated with the basic sense of the word.
  • The primacy of the basic sense of the word is established by the fact that most who self-identify as atheist fit the basic sense of the word (e.g. few buddhists will say "I am an atheist and a buddhist," despite their absence of belief in gods; the statement is generally made to signify the basic sense, generally as part of one's identity; most who have no belief will identify as agnostic).
  • In the basic sense of the word, there exists a belief on the part of the person to whom it applies, regardless of whether this belief derives from identifying as- or simply being (i.e. the predicate evaluating true for)- an atheist.
  • If a belief in the absence or non-existence of gods exists seperately from (independently of) any other worldview of an atheist (in the basic sense of the word), then the atheism of that person "contains" a belief.
  • As with religions, identifying as atheist follows from belief (basic sense) or the absence thereof (extended sense), and if the basic sense is the case, then this could be considered a religion.
I have underlined that I am not alone in considering the basic sense of the word to be as given above. The extended sense of the word, however, does include those who simply are without belief in gods. You are contending that the extended sense of the word is the basic or only correct sense, as far as I can tell. I posit that since no valid debate can actually follow from that premise (cf. begging the question, a fallacy of circular reasoning), it makes no sense to admit the validity of the premise as the grounds for a debate. If you prefer circular reasoning (incidentally a common flaw in religious argumentation), then by all means indulge, but the fact of the matter is that the definition of the term is in dispute, and not just in this thread, as demonstrated by the sources referenced. Cherrypicking a less usual meaning of a word on some notion that one is more correct than the reference (language as used) is pointless at best and fallacious at worst.

Incidentally, I don't have glasses on. I am simply arguing from a position I care little about, but which seems arguably correct, as outlined in brief above. The importance of aggregate traits in my life is limited to providing a probability assessment as a baseline when I do not know an individual, and is replaced with knowledge of the individual when such becomes available through interaction or otherwise. If a person identifies themselves as atheist to me, I assume the basic sense of the word, along with the connotations I have learned to associate with the identity from others who identify the same. Yes, that means I will make some negative assumptions, but I am usually quick to adjust when reality does not match the assumptions. This holds true for other identity statements as well (e.g. if someone identifies as Christian, I will assume they know nothing about the bible until they demonstrate otherwise).

As for the matter of misrepresentation of views, I am aware that it was satire on your part. I was making a sidebar about it, and will admit to a certain undertone of the same there. The satire works because of the misrepresentation, which was a rhetorical device in this case, not a logical argument. I don't see where there is a problem with asserting this, except perhaps in it being fairly obvious and thus perhaps not meriting comment. That said, I fail to see it as being an analogy, but that is probably unimportant at this point; otherwise, feel free to elaborate.

Finally, in post #387, you made an excellent point in favor of my position: people don't identify as nontoothfairyists, they simply note that they don't believe in the tooth fairy (although, admittedly, most probably believe in the nonexistence of the tooth fairy). People do identify as atheist, however. See my smoking analogy to kittenSol for commentary. Cliff notes, though, it implies the basic sense of the word, not the extended one (though the extended one may be correct, allowing for the possibility that the dispute over the meaning of the word may have validity).

Health,
al-Aswad.


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From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 7:53:48 AM   
thishereboi


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

You are arguing, then, that nobody knows anything, and that knowledge is nothing but belief. In this case, we cannot have any kind of conversation on this subject, because you are versing towards the irrational.


No, I am saying that you, kittinSol, might believe that, but it does not make it true. No matter how many times you say it.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 8:00:34 AM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: NihilusZero

That's because humans are subject to certain limitations.


No. That is because the entropy limit of a system does not permit its form to be expressed in its interior. The entropy limit of a system has been shown to be a function of its surface, not its volume, and accordingly no system may contain an expression of itself, or even an accurate description of itself. Furthermore, not all data about a system are accessible from the interior. For other, perhaps less obvious, limitations I would refer you to a good book on antinomies. Suffice to say that if what we perceive to be reality is simply an advanced simulation, there is no way for us to know, as we are closed off from the real world in which the simulation runs. This is a basic problem, in that knowing an exterior with only access to the interior is quite simply impossible (barring an admission of gnosis, which carries its own problems).

quote:

Otherwise you invoke epistemological nihilism.


And a nihilist has a problem with this because... ?

quote:

Besides, all it takes to deconstruct the theistic god is a logical spiral downward to unveiling it as just the line in the sand that differentiates the sort of creature one person would worship (based on their talents and traits) versus one they won't.


I never said it's hard to make a pretty good case against the popular Christian notion of God. I just asserted that proof of the existence or nonexistence of one is unobtainable, to the contrary of the assertions made by some others here. So there is no problem here, unless someone is secretly hoarding some knowledge science et al has failed to obtain (i.e. a means to test unfalsifiable hypotheses and obtain conclusive evidence as to the existence or nonexistence of a thing on the basis of that).

Health,
al-Aswad.


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From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 8:13:21 AM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

No, they are not, for belief in god relies entirely upon faith, whereas disbelief in god relies entirely upon logic, science, and facts.


Absence of belief in gods doesn't rely on anything at all.

Belief in the absence or nonexistence of gods relies on faith/belief.

Logic, science and facts (how is the latter distinguishable from the two former, unless you mean epistemology?) are entirely by the wayside in both cases, except they all lend themselves to agnosticism: "dunno." This kind of ignorance of how logic, science, philosophy and epistemology work is the secular equivalent of a Christian not knowing the first thing about their faith, let alone its origins. It is a fault to be corrected, not a basis for spewing "the gospel" all around.

"It is far better to have a thousand idiots attacking your views than to have one defending them"
- Voltaire.

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 8:18:16 AM   
thishereboi


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SpinnerofTales

I've been thinking this question for a long while and I've come up with one big difference between atheists and religions. Groups of Atheists usually don't spend a lot of time shouting about how all the other groups of Atheists are wrong.


Maybe they don't shout at the other groups because they all believe their is not god and it would be really silly to tell someone they are wrong, when they are both saying the same thing. And judging by the theads in P&R I would have to point out another difference I see. I see a new thread almost every day from atheists slamming religion in one way or another. In fact I think you just started a new one. Yet I don't notice a lot of religous people starting anything about how great god is. So maybe they are not out shouting at the other groups because they are spending too much time starting threads on CM.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 8:20:02 AM   
krosiema


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If atheism is not a religion, but simply the absence of belief, then what is agnosticism?

For me, an agnostic is one who is open to possibilities, but skeptical. An atheist is one who has deep... faith, shall we say... that their worldview is correct: that there is no god.

For example, people do not say, oh, because I have not seen the Great Wall for myself, I think that the Great Wall is not real. But an atheist will say, I've read the Bible but I have not seen God, and so I think God does not exist. So there does seem to be an element of faith in the atheist's worldview. For me, any worldview that requires faith is a religion.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 8:23:26 AM   
tazzygirl


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I see little point in shouting about something they dont believe in. I dont force my beliefs upon anyone.

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 8:38:39 AM   
nephandi


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Greetings

quote:

If atheism is not a religion, but simply the absence of belief, then what is agnosticism?


To me Agnosticism is closer to not having a religion than Atheism is. Agnostics have not made a choice either way, and most Agnostics I know really do not spend much time on the topic of religions. They live their lives as they see fit until someone can offer them proof either way. They do not believe either way. They just say there could be Gods, or there could not be.

quote:

For example, people do not say, oh, because I have not seen the Great Wall for myself, I think that the Great Wall is not real. But an atheist will say, I've read the Bible but I have not seen God, and so I think God does not exist. So there does seem to be an element of faith in the atheist's worldview. For me, any worldview that requires faith is a religion.


Any world view requires faith. We can not know anything 100 percent. We can say that something is 99,99 and how many nines you want after that percent likely, but if someone say they know something 100 percent they are delusional. To take to the absurd level. I am pretty damned sure I am in my home, sitting on my sofa writing this post right now. But I can not be 100 percent sure. I could be dreaming, or perhaps I am insane and my entire life is a elaborate delusion going through my mind as I sit vegetating in a hospital somewhere. Or even more unlikely, perhaps I am just a simulation, a computer program in some scientist lab believing itself to be a Norwegian woman and interacting with it's virtual world. I do not see these scenarios as likely, so I can say I am sure I sit at home in my sofa writing on my computer when I should be doing studies. But I can not say I am 100 percent sure, there is always a possibility that I am wrong. 

I wish you well


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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 9:18:45 AM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: eponavet

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_theory

I've officially cum....my mental mastrubation is over for now.


Does that mean mental snuggling is in order?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unruh_effect
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faraday_wave (the video is pretty neat)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soliton

The first link is kind of interesting in the context of CMB.

And if you want to be mentally multiorgasmic, consider that the area around a black hole in normal 3+1D spacetimes will approach a the shape of a closed 2+1D spacetime which is located on the "surface" of the black hole, and the implications of a black hole in a 4+1D spacetime having a 3+1D surface geometry in the same way. Then ponder the links given above and keep at it until you see how they are related.

Maybe you should ask the master if you can have a particle accelerator for Christmas.

Health,
al-Aswad.



_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 10:20:01 AM   
CallaFirestormBW


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quote:

ORIGINAL: krosiema

If atheism is not a religion, but simply the absence of belief, then what is agnosticism?



In my case, positing, I suppose, that I fall under Aswad's "extended" definition of an a-theist, the difference between an a-gnostic and an a-theist is in the search for understanding (gnosis). See, I don't classify myself as an a-gnostic because that would imply that the issue was only that I was without the right knowledge, but I am not even -looking- for gnosis on this matter. I consider the whole issue of gods or no gods without relevance to my existence. Only when I am bored and compelled into discussions like this do I come out of my shell enough to say "the issue of "god" is irrelevant to me. Because, to me, "god" is irrelevant, I truly call myself an a-theist... I live, comfortably, completely, happily -- I do service in my community, teach and learn of ethics and responsibility, develop a value system and share love and life without gods, and that, to me, makes me an a-theist, and not an a-gnostic.

Dame Calla

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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 4:56:30 PM   
Lostkitten3


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The Beatles were made up? Was their music a lie too?

Just because you can posture and demean ideas using large words and complicated sentences, does not make you superior, in knowledge or philosophy.

People keep faith because they need it.

I know of the Sumerian Myth of which you speak, but it has been told, in most every civilization of that time. Floods are common, even in this century, and people, devastated, turn to god in faith that he saved them for a greater purpose, and to maintain the belief that their loved ones have gone somewhere better, to alleviate the loss.

As to your comments on scientific Method, well, what they taught in Biology and every other science class must be wrong if you are right. Granted my version is much simpler than yours, people will believe what they choose (and more likely what is understandable and makes sense!)

So, I will not worship you, no matter how powerful you attempt to be. I have a man to worship. But honestly, if he's a god, then we all are, for I have plenty of power myself, as does every being on earth.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lostkitten3

Knowledge is something that can be proved scientifically, over and over again, by anyone following the same procedures.


In this manner, you demonstrate your lack of understanding of scientific method.

What you are proposing is the logical fallacy known as affirming the consequent.

Scientific method builds increasingly refined models from which to make useful predictions. The means by which such models are refined, is by testing falsifiable hypotheses, so that errors in the predictive power of a model are uncovered, allowing the model to be modified to account for the finding. It is a process of successive approximation toward a highly predictive set of models that can be relied on in fields like engineering and so forth, permitting us to advance our quality of life. In a very real way, it is the most reliable form of divination.

quote:

Given that most people's belief in god is via miracles, these would be anomalies that happen once in a blue moon, and no one (at the time) can explain why, so they call it something greater than themselves i.e. god.


Most people? Are you aware of how far you are overextending your generalization contrary to evidence?

If we assume that you meant "most of those people who believe in the judeo-christian-islamic notion of god, do so due to miracles," such that your statement makes a bit more sense, then it seems pretty clear that you are missing a quite fundamental point: most of those people believe, not because of miracles, but rather because it has been expected of them that they believe by some group (e.g. family, friends, society, etc.) whose expectations they have been inclined to attempt to meet at the time when they started believing.

This is similar to how most people in North America and Western Europe in the modern era believe democracy to be a good thing, or believe that killing is "wrong," or any number of other social and cultural norms, rules and beliefs that are internalized during the course of rearing. Without rearing, a child does not internalize these norms, rules and beliefs, and will be a blank slate or what is known as a feral child. Such a child does not normally develop language, either.

Miracles as a basis for belief... that'd be the day.

quote:

God is a story earlier humans made up to explain things like floods and death. We should have outgrown it by now.


You apparently have an equally lacking comprehension of early civilization and the social aspect of evolution.

Leaving aside that humanity has changed very little in the course of recorded history (some 8.000 years, at best), it is a pretty solid assumption that competition has been a part of evolutionary selection pressures. Starting with the assembly of the first primitive bilipid layers, if not before, it has been demonstrated that the formation of impermeable membranes has been instrumental in evolution. Exclusionary social and group identities, such as religions, take on the role of socially impermeable membranes, creating the necessary seperation and tension to facilitate the rise of selection pressures and beneficial conflicts, as well as limiting breeding stock sufficiently to enhance the overall genome (with raiding of other groups as a means by which to exchange the beneficial traits that are accumulated over time, while exchanging harmful traits with less frequency).

Bear in mind that many religions have their roots in the worship of men of authority and women of beauty.

The word "god" originates with PIE gHot, whose meaning is "that which is called out to," essentially. Mother is god in the eyes of a child. Doctors are gods in the eyes of the ill. States and companies are all gods in the eyes of those who are unemployed. Insurance companies are gods to those in need of reparations. Pension funds are the gods of the old and infirm. The almighty dollar is god to the whole capitalist world, surpassed only by the god called "oil," in whose name the cradle of life itself was savaged before the current occupation of it.

But there is another sense of the word, too, and that brings us back to the worship of men of authority and women of beauty. As late as the 20th century, it was common for Chinese peasants to worship beurocrats. In the 21st century, like the 20th before it, people worship the idols of Hollywood. On every school in the western world, the jocks are worshipped. In every sport, teams and players are worshipped. Come 4th of July again, a pretty huge chunk of bona fide atheists in America are going to worship an idea and a flag.

These are the real meanings of the term "god."

And I posit we have more of them now than we ever did as primitives.

Care to propose how we are to outgrow this, or what, exactly, the Beatles were made up to explain?

As for the flood and so forth... leaving aside evidence of several major floods in the area where the tale originated... the flood is a retelling of the older legend of Unamapishtu in the Sumerian mythos, in which humanity enters into a pact with Enlil to not destroy the environment, and to practice family planning for all time, lest the waters rise again to make the world uninhabitable and the people die off in famines. Whether the event has any real world antecedent or not, the message itself is one that it would have been pretty fucking useful for us to pay attention to. Pity the Jews screwed us over for political reasons that have been out of date for like millenia and the Saulist Christians have prevented inquiry into this up to the point where Secularism threw the whole shebang out the door.

Haven't you ever heard of the term "moral of the story?"

In conclusion, it is time to outgrow your own sense of superiority over those who have not yet "outgrown" what you demonstrably have exactly fuck-all comprehension of, save how to bow down, say your "hail dollars!" and hope you don't get crucified for giving the inappropriate sacrifices to the IRS.

Health,
al-Aswad.


(in reply to Aswad)
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RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/12/2009 5:08:00 PM   
eponavet


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: eponavet

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_theory

I've officially cum....my mental mastrubation is over for now.


Does that mean mental snuggling is in order?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unruh_effect
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faraday_wave (the video is pretty neat)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soliton

The first link is kind of interesting in the context of CMB.

And if you want to be mentally multiorgasmic, consider that the area around a black hole in normal 3+1D spacetimes will approach a the shape of a closed 2+1D spacetime which is located on the "surface" of the black hole, and the implications of a black hole in a 4+1D spacetime having a 3+1D surface geometry in the same way. Then ponder the links given above and keep at it until you see how they are related.

Maybe you should ask the master if you can have a particle accelerator for Christmas.

Health,
al-Aswad.




Sigh...snuggling is always good.    I'll ponder later....

< Message edited by eponavet -- 9/12/2009 5:10:27 PM >


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