Andrew, SO, HERE’S THIS GUY JOHN BELL . . . a physicist in Switzerland, and he’s saying that reality is nonlocal . . . he’s saying that one event can affect the other, even before the first event decides to happen! ONCE YOU HAVE faster than light effects happening, not only is this sort of thing possible, it has to happen! Once you exceed the speed of light, you’re going to have events in the future affecting things in the past! Physics guarantees that! That was MY "Ah ha!" moment of the day:) Your thoughts? Tori
Yes! So! If events in the future are causing results in the past, then it is impossible to predict cause and effect, and thus impossible to know exactly how everything in the universe works. Because we don't always know the cause before the effect is felt. Nor can we know all the causes before the effects are felt. Therefore! The universe does not behave like a deterministic machine within the perspective of time. Miracles, coincidences, magic, are all possible and beyond explanation, since the causes could be happening in the future. We could never control all the causes, and thus control the results. All we can do is Ask and Allow. I Love your curiosity and openness to many different sources of information, Andrew p.s. This is how in our moment of asking the universe can seemingly cause past events to have coincided to bring us that exact thing in the very moment of our asking, and sometimes even before. Andrew
The uncertainty priciple? This is not a world reducible to neat equations and pat answers, but an infinitely complex series of interdependencies, where the tiniest change in a remote place can have systemwide repercussions. I think I am a wave mechanic:) Tori
Life has kept me busy enjoying an abundant stream of manifestation, and I felt I needed to take some time and at least post the math proof to the 1? equation.
E = infinity
1/E = 0 (Any finite number divided by infinity equals zero.)
1 = 1
E/E = E/E (Anything over itself equals one.)
E/E = E/E + 0
E/E = E/E + 1/E (Remember: 1/E = 0.)
E/E = (E + 1)/E
E = E + 1 (Removed common denominator.)
E - E = 1
0 = 1 (Apparent contradiction.)
Now hard core math people would argue that this argument is invalid because it leads to contradiction. In math contradictions are not allowed. What's very interesting here is that E = E + 1 is valid. It was introduced to me in a college math course. If you add one teensy tiny something to infinity it doesn't change the infinity, because the infinity is so much bigger than that little 1.
Since math dudes won't allow contradiction, they say you can't subtract an infinity from an infinity (E - E). They'll argue that step is invalid. I say it is valid. It can be done. The reason they won't allow it is that it appears to break math, and that just can't be, can it?
I've pondered this paradoxical situation for many many years, and it finally came down to the only variable left. The observer. It's all in how you look at the equation. The trouble with (E - E) is that it can yield any result you choose. It can be 1, 0, -1, or any other number. So, mathematicians say it's an invalid operation because the results are unknown. What's really going on here is that math is telling us that we can't know everything through math. Some answers, nay an infinite number of answers, are not mechanical in nature. "Don't mind that man behind the curtain, I am the great and powerful Oz", they shout.
So for a long while E = E + 1 kept me busy. Until I was able to reduce the equation into 1?. There an extra mental twist to get there, and I'm going to save that as I need a good visual to explain it. For now, enjoy.
Andrew
Hi Andrew. Well, you've done a good proof, however I don't think it proves what you think it proves :-) What that proves to me is that infinity is not a number. You have made use of the technique known as reductio ad absurdum, or proof by contradiction :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reductio_ad_absurdum You started off by assuming infinity is a number and by manipulating it algebraically you reached a contradictory conclusion. Since the algebra is correct, it must be the original assumption that is faulty, proving infinity is not a number. Infinity in maths (I say 'maths' :-) is a shorthand. So it can't be used with mathematical operators. Correctly one would say : 1/0 -> E (infinity) which is read as 'one divided by zero tends to infinity'. The division operator 'blows up' when zero is input as the second argument. Zero is not a suitable input as a divisor, in the same way hardened steel ball bearings are not a suitable input for a food processor :-) Namaste, Greg
There are plenty of proofs around using infinity. There's a whole branch of math built around it. The fundamental "problem" with math is that anything that leads to contradiction is discarded as 'false', because mathematicians have assumed contradictions cannot exist at the same time. Math also has the built in assumption of 'equality'. There is no proof for equality. Again, it's an assumption. So no matter what the above proof proves to any given person, it all comes down to belief, which is just free will choice. Thus restating once again that everything, and I mean, everything is our own creation.
I personally choose not to be limited by math, and thus not by science. I live in an infinite (not a number, unpredictable, ever expanding, big party) universe.
According to your definition all of math must be reductio ad absurdum, since the original assumption of equality is false. There are no two things in the Universe that can be shown to be exactly equal. None. Math is a theory not a reality, unless assumed to be true, and then it is a reality for those that believe it. Andrew
Andrew, thank you so much for this fascinating discussion, I have read the entire thread with great interest. Your thoughts and ideas are intriguing, and you get me thinking along new lines. I really appreciate your unique perspective!
There are some areas where I'm not sure I'm on the same page with you (i.e. LOA is "the only law in the universe," and mathematics "should be banned"); but I am definitely on your wavelength when it comes to the relative/subjective nature of reality (i.e. each of us creates our own universe, and whatever we believe is what becomes real), which is a major theme of my life lately.
I am currently in the process of expanding my concept of reality, pushing back the boundaries, stripping away illusions, and removing limitations every day. I am grateful for your posts, Andrew, because they convey a sense of confidence borne of successful practice--and that confidence bolsters me on my own journey. It's like you are blazing a trail, and I am gratefully following in your wake, learning from what you are saying and doing.
Thank you, and please continue sharing your successful practice of the LOA. Meanwhile I will read more of your posts, continue learning from you, and (if you don't mind) ply you with questions.

Jason