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All those could be represented must be: 1.a part, 2. a whole, 3. an equivalence, 4. an uniqueness, 5. a tie, 6.a bound, 7. an influence, 8. a sensation, 9. an origin, 10. a derivative, 11. a choice, 12. a determinant, 13. an intent, and 14. a fulfillment.

All those could never be represented must never be: 1.a part, 2. a whole, 3. an equivalence, 4. an uniqueness, 5. a tie, 6.a bound, 7. an influence, 8. a sensation, 9. an origin, 10. a derivative, 11. a choice, 12. a determinant, 13. an intent, and 14. a fulfillment.



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What is your opinion on this?

2006-11-09 15:20:43 · 3 answers · asked by turbo m 1 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

3 answers

My opinion is that no one will be able to answer your 'question' because it doesn't make sense in any known language.

However, I will try. Imagine a universe that is divided into two large groups.

The members in group A include all 14 of your conditions and some others as well (e.g., 15 blue, 16 tall, etc).

The members of group B includes everything not included in group A.

Items 1 to 14 'may' be represented in some subsets of group A. (Paragraph 1)

No members of group B will ever be represented in any subset of group A. (Paragraph 2).

2006-11-10 02:04:27 · answer #1 · answered by SPLATT 7 · 1 0

My opinion is, you're are a mystic Buddhist who never had the power of independent thought and doesn't know your azz from a hole in the ground.

2006-11-10 23:15:05 · answer #2 · answered by gone 7 · 0 0

My opinion is that "this" could never be represented.

My opinion is that you don't read the answers that you get.

2006-11-12 20:19:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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