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2006-12-27 05:25:31 · 19 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

19 answers

One should read Roger Zelazny... "Nine Princes in Amber"... eventually, the sequence ends in/within the "Courts of Chaos".

So. Neither can exist without the other. Two sides of the same coin.

Why did the sexual deviate cross the road?
He was ******* the chicken...

It (chaos or order) is an example of an equation which can never ever be solved. Regardless of whom attempts solution, the variables are too many.

So... the sun comes up (not). Night falls and, having done so, attempts to crush the day. Morning, dressed as a ball-gown, equates stealing atomic secrets with democracy. But does she mean it?

Of course she does. Alamagordo is an unusual way to pronounce 'Manhatten'. And then, the sun comes up. Again.

2006-12-27 06:09:23 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

If chaos is the absence of order, conventional understanding and perception helps solicit an order and by labeling it as such.

Alternatively, Order came before Chaos for Chaos to persist.
(i.e. The Chicken came before the Egg for Egg to persist.)

However, both the above are incorrect suffering from incoherence.

One must not blindly believe in words used by the wise or to think that the instruction of another can lead to liberation.

But rather, realise the subject matter’s nature but not cling to the idea.

The idea of non-dependence on words must be banished. This very phrase after all, is merely words.

2006-12-27 06:04:29 · answer #2 · answered by pax veritas 4 · 0 0

Chaos

2006-12-27 05:58:43 · answer #3 · answered by drg5609 6 · 0 0

Order

2006-12-27 05:58:48 · answer #4 · answered by Charlotte L 2 · 0 0

The Void is infinite, from the Void comes the possibilities of Chaos, which forms the Order of the Universe.

2006-12-27 05:36:18 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

chaos came first in order to make the order.

2006-12-27 08:15:22 · answer #6 · answered by asli 2 · 0 0

Order of course. What is the definition of chaos? Absence of order. Isn't it? Without order there can't be chaos.

2006-12-27 05:32:35 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Depends on the limits of your definition of "first". "First" for the Universe we comprehend was complete order. Now entropy is moving us to greater chaos. If the universe runs out of energy from that first bang, gravity will bring us all together again into a little ball.

But what if the little ball we started as had a chaotic beginning? And when it first banged, was it full of chicken eggs?

2006-12-27 05:54:25 · answer #8 · answered by sixgun 4 · 1 0

first and astounding, you're incorrect. Order can, certainly, come from chaos. in any different case, ice would desire to in no way freeze.. There are such factors as having the unfastened capability desire a reaction that looks to violate your "order from chaos" themes. Nature likes illness, yet she likes favorable capability transactions much greater. and that's how order comes from chaos. in case you may open your recommendations to technological awareness, you does not be caught making such somewhat some severe (and heavily fake) assumptions.

2016-12-11 17:00:22 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Big Bang Theory suggests our origin must have been chaotic. Order is usually organized so it probably came after subduing chaos

2006-12-27 05:39:16 · answer #10 · answered by BANANA 6 · 0 0

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