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or..... answer this ..... what is the deepest thought you have ever thought beyond recognition

2007-02-02 08:56:14 · 31 answers · asked by insenergy 5 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

with out the depth´s of swimming pools or space please !!!! i was hoping for some kind of intelligent answer to the depths of our immaginations with a metaphoricial subdue which could explain the adversities of what makes you succumb to the adjectives of annihilation which burry the piont beyond redemption without sinaccle sarcasm....

2007-02-02 09:15:33 · update #1

31 answers

How deep is your love?

2007-02-02 08:59:46 · answer #1 · answered by Jacuzzi Lover 6 · 2 0

Our the most certain conclusions 100% universal in all space/time? Is 2+2=4 always true? Can we reasonably doubt everything?

My tentetive view says yes. Addition is contingent an "things" to add up. Say perhaps the universe would be experience the Big Crunch (opposite of Big Bang) and there were only ONE thing left, and further more no intelligent life to count it, it would be impossible for 2+2=4. I've also brought the possibility of anti-matter in the equasion.

A triangle always has three sides. True by definition, but if no triangles existed (and I'm not sure that any true triangles do exist outside of the human psyche) then the thought is irrelevant.

2007-02-02 17:02:32 · answer #2 · answered by Unconvincable 3 · 0 1

That perception itself does not define reality. Perception shapes Belief, and it is Belief that defines Reality. Accordingly, as people perceive and believe differently, people experience different realities. What is "real" is whatever you believe to be. As soon as you truly believe something does not exist, it doesn't. If you just state that, but then see the item before you, your perception brings about the belief again, refuting the statement just made and existence in once again conferred.

Like someone once asked me, "If a tree falls in the woods and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound?". My answer is "What do you believe?" (Just for the record, I believe it does make a sound).

2007-02-02 19:51:21 · answer #3 · answered by Adashi 3 · 0 0

All questions are of the same depth, it's just a frame of mind.
'How long have I got, Doctor?'
'Did you put LSD in my tea?'
'Does this bus stop at Clapham Common?'
'Is there a God?'
'Should I push this button?'
'Was that it?'
All the same depth, each equally profound, there can be no absolutes in the abstract, therefore no measure.

2007-02-04 04:34:27 · answer #4 · answered by Londo Mol 4 · 0 0

Is aging actually caused by the nonstop barrage of neutrino bombardment to which we are exposed on an ongoing basis?

2007-02-02 17:07:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The deepest question I've ever asked? Not a very original one.

'How should I live?'

2007-02-02 20:59:13 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

who was i in my past life and who were the people i love. everything is predestined, meaning the people you know now were in your life before. so i wonder how things were and why are we ment to be in eachothers lives. not exactly a solid reason but an answer. to what we will do in the future and how our future selves will live their lives.

2007-02-02 17:24:43 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Does DNA possess intelligence?

2007-02-02 22:17:31 · answer #8 · answered by guzzlegob 4 · 0 0

How far to the bottom of the Marianas trench

2007-02-02 17:51:21 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Was in 12feet of water in my local swimming baths, and asked myself why did i dive in? and will i ever get to the surface, GLUG GLUG.

2007-02-02 17:03:19 · answer #10 · answered by newciderman 6 · 1 0

I haven't really asked a deep question, but i sure as hell just answered the last one there with a deep answer............

2007-02-02 17:05:58 · answer #11 · answered by . 7 · 0 0

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