Citat:
What if life isn't something that living organisms generate, but something they receive from the outside? Modern science don't acknowledge the existence of any kind of life force, but it has been part of the beliefs of certain cultures for millenia. There are things science can't fully explain, like why we have to sleep and especially why we dream. All or most animals need to sleep and for instance puppies die in days if they're kept awake.
According to e.g. Judaic lore, humans collect life force whilst sleeping. What if Western science is wrong in part concerning this, and humans depend on an externally generated force to live? If that's the case, where does it come from? What is the source of all life, and what would happen if that source would potentially run dry? Interesting questions perhaps.. What's your take on it? Complete bullshit or could there be something to it?
We recharge our cellphones every day but we don't seriously consider that sleeping is just like recharging us. Maybe we plug in to something while we dream that replenishes our life force? It also fits not only with Chinese teachings, but also with God in Genesis who blew his spirit into the clay that was Adam. Perhaps this process needs to be redone continously? The energy we have is spent during the day. It discharges until we can hardly move, and then in sleep we travel to realms where we're given new life. Quite beautiful really...
But it's also quite scary since it means all of us could just die all of a sudden. What if there's only a limited amount of life force, and all the extra humans being born each day puts a strain on it? Maybe there is a "critical mass" when there's just not enough life to go around. What would happen when that hypothetical limit is reached?
According to e.g. Judaic lore, humans collect life force whilst sleeping. What if Western science is wrong in part concerning this, and humans depend on an externally generated force to live? If that's the case, where does it come from? What is the source of all life, and what would happen if that source would potentially run dry? Interesting questions perhaps.. What's your take on it? Complete bullshit or could there be something to it?
We recharge our cellphones every day but we don't seriously consider that sleeping is just like recharging us. Maybe we plug in to something while we dream that replenishes our life force? It also fits not only with Chinese teachings, but also with God in Genesis who blew his spirit into the clay that was Adam. Perhaps this process needs to be redone continously? The energy we have is spent during the day. It discharges until we can hardly move, and then in sleep we travel to realms where we're given new life. Quite beautiful really...
But it's also quite scary since it means all of us could just die all of a sudden. What if there's only a limited amount of life force, and all the extra humans being born each day puts a strain on it? Maybe there is a "critical mass" when there's just not enough life to go around. What would happen when that hypothetical limit is reached?
Jag tror att "livskraften" är konstant under ens liv. Den stora frågan är som du skriver "the theory of everything" dvs om vi kommer att hitta "det slutliga" samspelet mellan det materiella och det immateriella (vilket jag tror att du syftar på). Något som binder ihop de båda.
Ett exempel är ju när man kokar varmt vatten: Man är hemma och blir sugen på en kopp the. Tanken bakom detta är att man vill ha the. Utförandet sker på molekylnivå med olika reaktioner osv. Här ser vi att tanken (immatreilla) och utförandet (materiella) hänger ihop, och för att få en kopp behövs båda två som samspelar med varandra. I detta fallet är dock tanken viktigast, eftersom att det materiella bara blir ett verktyg för det immateriella. Men som sagt så behövs båda två för att det ska fungera.
OM man hittar något liknande i micro miljö, i en atomkärna eller förmodligen ännu mindre som samspelar med det immateriella eller t.o.m är båda två samtidigt. Ja, då har du förmodligen hittat en "theory of everything".
