>> Sometimes I think that when it is our time to understand, we will. > >> And until that point we should just keep our heads under the parapet?? > > Yeah maybe. Or you could go on believing everything your physics professor > has to say. The truth is that man will never understand even a minute > fraction of life and the way things work. > > You base your statement on man's burning curiosity, which is a totally valid > point. I, myself, fall into this category. I am just saying from personal > experience, that when you assign all the naturally occuring events a number, > it just get's boring and leaves less room for the imagination to kick in. > > BTW particle and wave duality is just another small example of science's > flaws. They categorize everything and then WHAM! Something like that comes > along and throws a monkey wrech into the equation. Then they try to find out > why and fix it. I guess it is something to do to pass the time, but to egg > people on by paying them money to fill their heads with it? Not cool. I > liked it better when the scientists (Plato, Socrates, etc.)just taught whoever > would listen. > > Uh, I don't have a physics lecturer, sorry....
Jason Brunton --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]