. Yes, and what of those atoms which make up my hands and my eye- balls. Do they too have a right to vote in a pretend democracy ??
Does the occurrence of an electron within it’s probability wave relate to a single atom or many ?? If infinity and zero where to have a baby what would it be called ???? don't say One ??? There is no physical measure for conscious awareness. Atomic structure, Newton and Einstein happily record and predict tangible pattern behaviours. These alone rest in a non-human world where every solution creates multiple questions. Great fun and very intellectually simulating but does very little to help me understand what it is to be me. The physicality of the phenomena surrounding me does nothing to help me gets to grips with love, hate, beauty, revelation, stupidity and brilliance, all of which haunt me on a daily basis. Science, Darwinism explains physicality only. In my head, my mind does exists as much as any other existence, a very real world which is real to me but science will never recognise. According to cosmology, Outer space is 80% dark-energy, which basically means they don’t know. Like they don’t know what gravity is. They know how it works but not what it is. Similarly, consciousness. How does physicality occur, where does it come from and go too ??? At a sub-atomic level nothing exists in a traditional sense, it only has a probability of occurring. Infinite probability is the foundation of all science. Now, decide what it is that brings light into your back yard ………… &&& . On Sep 8, 9:46 am, Mark Ty-Wharton <[email protected]> wrote: > So we live in a Universe made of atoms and the atoms that make up my physical > form are as old as the Universe itself > > Q. Do they know that? > > Q. Space is the closest thing to a vacuum with just a few hydrogen atoms per > cubic centimetre (apart from all the debris) - what's that all about then? > > Q. Quantum theory predicts that no volume of space can be perfectly empty - > meaning the tiny space between the atoms in your physical being have > something in them? > > In any case, the perfect vacuum is only a philosophical concept and has never > been observed in practice. > > Sent from an iPhone
