This line of thinking, err, counting, serves to distract.

The operative spirit is stated by Neil : " ...  how we might live and
what we could be ... "  If our start is honest, we'll have the answers
for ourself.

That's the rub, though. Honesty ! Animals are rarely dishonest, but
experience tells me, it's a very evolved attribute for us to have. How
many crooks will admit that they seek, value and expect their people
to be honest to them, that honesty is therefore the more fundamental
and superceding a value even among the dishonest, and that they must
therefore embrace it fully in their own life and not give in to these
dishonest ways in thought and deed ? !

Honesty is difficult because it demands a consistent core within
ourself. That needs investment from us ...  an Honesty Foundation, to
seed and nurture and promote honesty as the preferred value in our
pragmatic and expedience filled lives, on a massive scale. It would
have to be planned, organised for and executed. But, seeming so
uneconomic and non viable, who's to fund it ? I believe, it is for the
world of business and the government to step in, simply because they
have the money and the power, and the mandate.

Our connectivity program would initiate from there.

On Feb 28, 10:56 am, ornamentalmind <[email protected]> wrote:
> Archy, the operative word there is ‘gratuitous’. Where is the line
> drawn? There are limited resources and mankind is apt to deal in terms
> of power. Is one chicken in every pot enouth?....two?...three?
>
> On Feb 27, 7:07 pm, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > The question in science for me concerns how we might live and what we
> > could be if we could escape gratuitous competition.  I can see some
> > personal ways to escape, but these seem to lack connectivity with
> > others that seems the route we are cast on.
>
> > On 28 Feb, 02:14, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I don't know that a divisibility issue thread would go all that far.
> > > Thurman's reference to the collider basically is demonstrative of
> > > man's desire to reach an end that can be held on to, owned and
> > > possessed.  Problem being that even with the Hadron establishing the
> > > first successful particle collision and supposed gathering of sub
> > > atomic information pertaining to universe origin and/or the
> > > fundamental nature of matter seems hardly the end of the line or the
> > > point of conclusion with regard to infinite divisibility.  This
> > > basically renders the LHC experiment a 5 billion dollar playstation
> > > game. How can the science of infinite divisibility be carried out
> > > without infinite experimentation.  Will we, even can we, get past this
> > > point of atomic particles? There remains the unresolved enigmas of
> > > dark matter/energy and the Higgs Boson.  I find the phrase God
> > > Particle a bit entertaining but who knows what we'll discover over the
> > > next 500 years if we don't accidentally cause a planetary implosion.
>
> > > On Feb 27, 9:58 am, ornamentalmind <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > Oh, and the issue of infinite divisibility… perhaps ripe for a new
> > > > topic? Or would it be appropriate here? I know I’ve approached this
> > > > analysis a few times here at ME and so far find it sound. Of course on
> > > > one level, not having completed the science (most likely an
> > > > impossibility), “we” do not know as you point out Slip. Yet on other
> > > > levels including thought experiments and analysis, it most assuredly
> > > > points to the nature of reality.
>
> > > > On Feb 27, 6:08 am, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > It was interesting but not sure it adds to or lends any credibility to
> > > > > Buddism.  Its just another view I guess.  Not sure about everything
> > > > > being infinitely divisible.  I'd visit Tibet but my lungs won't go.
>
> > > > > On Feb 27, 12:59 am, ornamentalmind <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > > Robert Thurman
>
> > > > > > Topics include:
> > > > > > The Growing popularity of Atheism
> > > > > > Buddhism’s Stance on Deism
> > > > > > Buddhism and the Meaning of Life
> > > > > > Hyperrealism in Buddhism
> > > > > > Backstage interview
> > > > > > Obama and the History of Christianity in America
> > > > > > The Chinese Occupation of Tibet
> > > > > > Why the Dalai Lama Matters
> > > > > > The Source of the Dalai Lama’s Popularity
>
> > > > > > Many points here…most are quite interesting. What do you think?
>
> > > > > >http://fora.tv/2009/02/09/Robert_Thurman_at_City_Arts__Lectures
>
> > > > > > I studied w/Bob back in the mid 80s.- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -

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