[MD] Quality and the Higgs Field: An Analogy
John Carl
ridgecoyote at gmail.com
Mon Feb 7 10:02:59 PST 2011
Dear Jan-Anders,
An amoral universe cannot be perfect nor unperfect for both of those terms
refer to value in some sense, and an amoral universe cannot contain any
value whatsoever.
Sorta like your and Ham's amoral theorizing, if you ask me. A balance
between materia and antimateria must be construed then to be "just right"
and in fact, the exact opposite of "amoral".
In the context of your (and Monty Python's) "Ping" - the sound represents a
noise that's meant to signify something happening, when in fact, nothing
actually is.
Sorta like your and Ham's amoral theorizing...
If you ask me.
John
On Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 11:42 PM, Jan-Anders <jananderses at telia.com> wrote:
> Dear John
>
> The newly invented theory of the Big Ping states that the universe exists
> because of an anomaly, an unbalance between materia and antimateria. A
> difference between what is and what could be. To be or not to be is the
> question.
>
> This unperfectness of the amoral universe is the root of the whole
> existence of the universe and the sound of it is "Ping!".
>
> JA
>
> moq_discuss-request at lists.moqtalk.org skrev 2011-02-04 08.28:
>
>> yeah...
>>
>> what Mark says...
>>
>>
>> > An amoral universe would imply that we are somehow separated from the
>>> > universe. I do not see how such a thing is even conceivable.
>>> >
>>>
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