The primordial state of the Absolute is immaterial, spaceless, and timeless.
“The primordial state of the Absolute is immaterial, spaceless, and timeless.”
The World Motivation
The primordial state of the Absolute is immaterial, spaceless, and timeless.
“The primordial state of the Absolute is immaterial, spaceless, and timeless.”
Explore more quotes by Dejan Stojanovic on topics like Science, wisdom, and life lessons.
“The primordial state of the Absolute is immaterial, spaceless, and timeless.”
“To risk life to save a smile on a face of a woman or a child is the secret of chivalry.”
“We don’t know anything about silent sages, buried knowledge, the eye of the mute poet, serene seers, yet how many talkative destroyers, prophets and ideologues, teachers and beautifiers there are on the other side.”
“It is wrong to use statements such as “there is no south of the South Pole” as proof that there is nothing beyond the point when time stops. Such statements may sound seductive, but they are not scientific, nor do they prove what they try to prove.”
“Tunnel from the absolute realm into the relative realm of the world and vice versa. Without one, there is no other. This point could also be the nucleus of a black hole at the point of its absolute density where everything sank into One without any space. That is the Zero point. This point is the gateway to new life. At this point, a black hole either “explodes” or disappears.”
“Both the man of science and the man of action live always at the edge of mystery, surrounded by it.”
“The holes in front of us were fossilized tracks, huge ones. Dinosaur tracks, no doubt. As we looked closer, we could see that there were both handprints and footprints, and some of them had finger and toe marks. They had the telltale shape of tracks left by sauropods. We had found a 170-million-year-old dinosaur dance floor, records left by colossal sauropods that were about fifty feet long and weighed as much as three elephants.”
“Whatever we make, or invent, or build, is with us forever; we cannot throw it away. The methan and carbon diocide we put into the atmosphere will have effects, just like the nitrogen and phospate we flush into our rivers. They will end up impacting on human and more-than-human bodies, and lives. So the first question is 'should we be doing this?' That must replace the standard 20th-century question: 'can we make a profit from doing this?”
“Your memory isn’t a fixed capacity; it’s a living system that rewires itself based on what you ask it to do”
“Every science advances only so far as articulation permits.”