D
dysfunction
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back from where?
Originally posted by Wij
You are wrong. I have answered this subject on these forums before. However, you were fated to say it so I cannot feel malice for you. Only pity for your shackled existence.
Originally posted by Wij
Your ignorance is only surpassed by the number of ions you possess whose third shell is blind.
Originally posted by Mr.Monkey
You wake up. You are in a room with one door. It is closed.
You have 2 options
1)Stay
2)Leave
You chose to stay. You made your choice, and have exercised free will.
However, the door is locked. You couldn't have left even if you wanted. You infact did not have free will, but the illusion of free will.
As a result the Free will / Determination agruement is flawed, as it has not been possible to set up a testable hypothesis for either side. If that cannot be done, then it is relegated to metaphysics with questions such as "Does god exist".
And only worth arguing about if you like typing essays and disagreeing with people for the sake of it.
Originally posted by Mr.Monkey
You wake up. You are in a room with one door. It is closed.
You have 2 options
1)Stay
2)Leave
You chose to stay. You made your choice, and have exercised free will.
However, the door is locked. You couldn't have left even if you wanted. You infact did not have free will, but the illusion of free will.
As a result the Free will / Determination agruement is flawed, as it has not been possible to set up a testable hypothesis for either side. If that cannot be done, then it is relegated to metaphysics with questions such as "Does god exist".
And only worth arguing about if you like typing essays and disagreeing with people for the sake of it.
Sorry, for a moment I thought you knew what you were talking about.Originally posted by Wij
The urge is free, the forms are shackles. The forms can only make the urge cycle upon itself though. In truth it permeates everything. Everything is free. It just does not realise it.
It's a really heavy door. You'd probably hurt yourself so badly trying you'd die.Originally posted by Testin da Cable
what happens if you kick the door down and then decide to stay after all?
bat a wud wak fav hantrat miyales
and a wud wak fav hantrat moore
jast tae bee tha mahn hoo waks a thoosand miyales
tae fal doon at yar doore
*mosh*
Originally posted by WPKenny
You really should put the "BADA DA DA!" bit in there. Travesty tbh.
I thought sin was an urge against the obvious?Originally posted by Wij
The obvious is a sin against the urge.
Originally posted by Mr.Monkey
It's a really heavy door. You'd probably hurt yourself so badly trying you'd die.
Originally posted by Mr.Monkey
I thought sin was an urge against the obvious?
i=-1^(1/2)Originally posted by Wij
That's a mathematical impossibility.
Originally posted by Wij
The imaginary only differs the the real in angle of intersection. It doesn't affect the mathematics.
Originally posted by ECA
Beware the subtended angle of the hypotenuse, for it is evil.
Originally posted by ECA
Beware the untended angel of the hippo, for it is evil.
Originally posted by Wij
It is not evil. It's only your dissonance to it which threatens to snuff out your charge.
One attacked me as I left Temple Tube station this morning. I was lucky to get away with my lunch.Originally posted by Testin da Cable
hippos are quite dangerous I hear
Originally posted by Mr.Monkey
One attacked me as I left Temple Tube station this morning. I was lucky to get away with my lunch.
So I'm off to buy a hippo "keep away" stick at argos. I'll let you know if it subtends and angles or otherwise dis-inflates the universal in any way.
bleh![]()