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can u explain in 6-5 sentences

2007-03-14 17:50:28 · 6 answers · asked by Kenny H 2 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

6 answers

so what happins if you keep saying that things are going to be good?

2007-03-14 17:54:54 · answer #1 · answered by badmp35 2 · 0 0

Thing is, you can predict all the good you like, and when it happens, people are going to say, "so what?" Predict a calamity, and if it happens they'll print your name on the front pages. -Maybe write a bood about you too! Simple. People tend to overlook and forget all the good things that happen, but notice and remember -or dwell on- the bad things. Think of all the prophets of the past who predicted doom and gloom, or an apocalypse. Now how many can you think of who foresaw peace, happiness, prosperity (other than Jesus, please!)? Even the Biblical prophets are remembered more for foreseeing disaster than goodness.

2007-03-15 01:35:45 · answer #2 · answered by BuddyL 5 · 0 0

No. but, if you keep looking for the bad things in your life you will find them, or create them. It does not make you a prophet to predict that. Also in order for you to be prophet you actually have to speak to God. Now if God told you that bad things are going to keep happening and you said it because you know it to be true, cause God told you so. Than I'd say yes you are a prophet.

2007-03-15 01:04:57 · answer #3 · answered by Petra 5 · 0 0

If you mean that by saying, "Bad things are coming" you become a prophet, then sure, I suppose you could be considered one because bad things are always happening. But the same goes for the opposite- good things are always happening, too, so if you predicted that all the time you'd also be right. (The good things are there, they just don't always make the headline news.)

2007-03-15 00:54:35 · answer #4 · answered by IQ 4 · 0 0

Words have vibrational frequency. Just as colors and numbers can be associated with a vibrational frequency, so can sounds and words. Every letter of the alphabet can be associated with a number and every number (and every colour ) can be associated with a musical note. When letters are strung together to form a specific sound or word, the word is "charged" in a sense, with a specific frequency that is more than the sum of its parts, and that word then, influences all who think, read, speak or hear it.Words are even further charged as humans attach certain emotions to specific words... think of how the word "gay" has taken on new meaning - and vibrational frequency - as folks stopped using the word to mean "happy" to use it instead to mean "homosexual".

The bible says "In the beginning was the word", inferring that the universe, all of God's creation was created from some spoken expression, a Godly sound.

As individualized pieces of God or source we all have the power to make change, to create life. Words are so powerful and we are careless in using them. The law of creation is that whatever follows the words "I Am," becomes so, it is absolute. "I am hot," "I am cold," "I am a failure," "I am so lucky." All of these statements are absolute because they are known as truth.

2007-03-15 01:17:13 · answer #5 · answered by carrie 3 · 0 0

No. It is the other way.

"Our two minds .... One is an act of the emotional
mind, the other of the rational mind. In a very real
sense we have two minds, one that thinks and one that
feels" (Daniel Goleman, Emotional Intelligence,
Bloomsbury Publishing, London, 1996, page 8). This
rational mind is also called the faculty of logic and
reason.

The Upanishads say that these two are opposite in
nature. Modern psychologists also know it, but they
are not very sure of it:

"At the same time, reason sometimes clearly seems to
come into conflict with some desires (even while not
being in conflict with others) giving us the impression
that reason is separate from emotion".

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/reason...

The persons in whom the emotional mind works dominantly
are called optimists. They are mostly fearless about what
is going to happen.

The persons in whom the rational mind works dominantly
are called pessimists. They fear many things about future.

The Upanishads say that the emotional mind searches
for some thing good in what is generally termed as 'bad' by
the society, and the rational mind searches for some thing
bad in what is generally termed as 'good' by the society.
Hence the saying that optimists see oppurtunity in evey
danger, the pessimists see danger in every oppurtunity.
Religious people are optimists and scientists are
pessimists. Science has proposed more theories
that some thing is going to be bad, which are some times
opposing in nature, like global warming by some and
coming of the ice age by others.

http://www.iceagenow.com/Pacemaker.htm
http://www.whoi.edu/institutes/occi/viewArticle.do?id=10046
http://muller.lbl.gov/pages/IceAgeBook/IceAgeTheories.html
http://www.iceagenow.com/QandA.htm
http://www.junkscience.com/mar06/Time_AnotherIceAge_June241974.pdf
http://www.longbets.org/218
http://www.ourcivilisation.com/aginatur/iceage.htm
http://www.peter-thomson.co.uk/ice-ages/Ice_age_theories.html
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/12/08/1038950270355.html
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4081541.stm

They create such fear in people which is worse than that
created by doomsday preachers. People are duped by
high-tech equipment used by scientists.

2007-03-15 04:31:50 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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