But everything in it requires 2 forces to operate.
Example:
To create electricity requires a positive charge and a negative
charge.
To create a human life requires a female and a male.
To create digital technology requires the binary 1's and 0's.
etc.
It makes sense then there is not one 'Uni'-verse but 2 'verses':
The 'Uni'-verse.
+
The inverse of the 'Uni'-verse.
------------------------------------------------------
I will refer to the 'Uni'-verse as the posi-verse from now on.
I will refer to the inverse of the 'Uni'-verse as the negi-verse from
now on.
So we have a positive and a negative 'verse'. Not to say either one is
good or bad just that they are the equal opposite of one another.
------------------------------------------------------
Our posi-verse is the physical world we live in. The inverse to this
is the non-physical world or negi-verse.
Both 'verses' are connected and required equally for the other one to
operate.
When a life dies it drops its matter and energy to the earth then its
'soul' inverts into the negi-verse.
When a life is created a 'soul' inverts from the negi-verse into the
matter and energy of the newly created life in the posi-verse.
Nothing ever lives forever.
But
Nothing ever dies forever.
We live in a 'Bi'-verse not a 'Uni'-verse.
-Josh.
On Oct 18, 5:38 pm, jdawe <jd...@ncable.com.au> wrote:
> We live in a place called the 'Uni'-verse.
I do, not sure about you. You seem to think mechanical engineers care
about your drivel.
> But everything in it requires 2 forces to
> operate.
I am sure of 4.
> Example:
>
> To create electricity requires a positive
> charge and a negative charge.
And space and time. And conduction bands and work functions.
> To create a human life requires a female
> and a male.
Creatures are known that spawn children directly, without sex. It is
called parthenogenesis. Sharks are the highest form that (so far) can
reproduce asexually.
> To create digital technology requires the
> binary 1's and 0's.
And computers. And a logic system.
> etc.
>
> It makes sense then there is not one
> 'Uni'-verse but 2 'verses':
No, it does not.
...
> Nothing ever dies forever.
>
> We live in a 'Bi'-verse not a 'Uni'-verse.
Well, Bi then.
David A. Smith