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> The Fundamental Nature of Everything, a universal particle/wave function?
Edoesn't=Mc^2
Posted: Jan 12 2007, 01:37 AM


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I've always thought that since everything in the universe, if broken down to it's most fundamental state, is made of only one type of thing/particle, what is it that makes the difference? Is it human consciousness itself? Is sentient consciousness what gives the world/universe it's seemingly complex forms? And if so, why and how?
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kaneda
Posted: Jan 14 2007, 08:38 AM


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You are very possibly right. Some say super strings, meaning actually ten dimensional loops almost impossibly small. Maybe there are folds in space which look like actual strings and are only a few orders smaller than an electron instead of standard SS size which would make them more useful?

There are over six billion people on Earth and everyone looks different, despite there only being a few actual differences between all of them. I think we have evolved to detect the differences in everything (as far as our limited senses allow), the more differences we can detect, the better so a survival trait.


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