They even manage to get knots in fluids these days.  Thanks t Gabby we
now know it makes sense to get knotted!

On Mar 13, 3:19 pm, andrew vecsey <[email protected]> wrote:
> Very nice of you Gabby, thanks.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wednesday, March 13, 2013 12:00:34 PM UTC+1, Gabby wrote:
>
> > Hi Andrew, I came across a website yesterday of which I thought the
> > non-verbal and non-audible video material would be of interest to you. And
> > then I somehow forgot to go back to the Minds Eye website and find the
> > appropriate thread to link this info for you to find it. Shame on my
> > laziness. Here is the link now:
> >http://www.nature.com/nphys/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nphys2560.html
>
> > Am Sonntag, 6. Januar 2013 14:16:08 UTC+1 schrieb andrew vecsey:
>
> >> I have written a new chapter to my "Think Park - A Journey thru space and
> >> time" publication/video that made me think more about thinking. Whenever I
> >> think, I seem to be talking to myself, I can think about something in my
> >> memory by imagining and reliving sensations I remember, but whenever I
> >> think about those memories, I ultimately revert to talking to my self (up
> >> to now, fortunately silently). Do others in this group of thinkers have the
> >> same experience? If yes, why do you think that it is like that? If not, how
> >> do you manage to think without mentally talking it out? The excerpt of my
> >> new chapter that started me thinking about this line of thought is below:
>
> >> "Before men could talk, they groaned and grunted.  Just like with crying
> >> and laughing, it was sometimes difficult to tell the difference between
> >> displays of sorrow and joy, or pain and pleasure.  At the 60 meter point
> >> from the start of the think park, about 18,000 years ago, man started to
> >> use *words* to display his emotions. Words helped man to think and
> >> enabled him to articulate and share his inner most thoughts.  *Pictures
> >> and written words* enabled his thoughts and his knowledge to be stored
> >> for later contemplation and to be scattered like seed to grow.  This
> >> cultivation, communication and sharing of thoughts, knowledge and
> >> experience resulted in the growth of *agriculture* that enabled *
> >> civilizations* to flourish."

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