I'll give you a different example.  What color is a yellow banana?

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Angela Mailander" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 4:14 PM
Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Heterogeneous Versus Homogeneous Philosophies 
and Transparency


> The syntax of your last sentence is not entirely
> transparent to me. Please clarify.
>
>
>
> --- Kirk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Homogenized milk is actually heterogeneous.
>> Homogenous means -same throughout- and is always
>> clear though it may have color. This is because
>> compounds in such mixtures are perfectly integrated.
>> Heterogeneous mixtures show compounds, such as in
>> the whitish color of particles in milk. They may be
>> well suspended, but they still stand out.
>>
>> Thus transparency is a feature of true integration.
>> Heterogeneous solutions will show different mixtures
>> at different spots. Thus ambivalence.
>>
>> We could use these two analogies to decide whether a
>> person or group of either  spiritual or political
>> entities is integral or merely appropriating.
>>
>> Someone of integrity is transparent because
>> homogeneous in their ethics, ontology, epistimology.
>> Someone else, like in homogenized milk, may seem to
>> be something and yet they aren't. In fact it's
>> almost a truism that the more someone seems like
>> something the less they are that.
>>
>> It is almost certain that the most integrated people
>> cannot be discerned in any possible way being most
>> transparent. It stands to reason.
>>
>> Okay, now you try it, look around and see.
>
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