1) MPD's don't really exist.
2) Energy is eternal, cannot be created nor destroyed.
3) Isaac Newton stated that as scientist you could do nothing BUT believe in God, because the systems around us are too complex to have been random.
4) ADD? :)
5) Draw me. Ponder me. Write about me. :p
6) Dreams are just random electrical doohickeys that your mind attaches images too, just to make sense of it. That's not to say that you can't get something out of them... it's like a poem or great piece of writing, in which each person who reads it takes something different away from it.
The End.
2007-11-15 08:33:41
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answer #1
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answered by czekoskwigel 5
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1) It is suicide if the personality is trying to kill itself and manslaughter for all the other ones.
2) You can't look at the current make-up of life and try to answer questions like this. Take evolution into account, study the ideas regarding how life progressed. As for the energy? It starts with either the sun or geothermal energy that is caused by radioactive materials within the earth.
3) Yes, you can. Scientist can be as irrational as anyone else. They probably aren't very good scientists though.
(Yes, Newton was the best, but he lived in an ignorant era ruled by theocracies. There are many reasons not to agree with his metaphysical beliefs.)
4) Life is boring because we have removed most of the struggle for survival. It is hard to be bored when just seeing tomorrow is a challenge. Life is too easy, challenge yourself to cure boredom.
5) Ideas? Start a quest to learn things you think you aren't interested in; try parasites, they are the most interesting form of life there is. This ties in to question #4.
6) Dreams are just the random firing of synapses mixed with things that are going on in your life. Any premonition you think you had is more easily explained by being a statistical anomaly, or the fact that you picked up on some information that you don't recall learning.
Don't let mushy-headed people convince you of any sort of supernatural explanations. There is no sound theory to explain supernatural processes; the real reasons are much more interesting and they make sense. If someone goes off about "energy" ask yourself, "What type? Is it kinetic, thermal, electromagnetic, or what?" Then ask yourself how much energy would be necessary to accomplish these supernatural feats and then ask where it comes from, and why only apparently stupid and credulous people can harness it. Why can those claiming supernatural powers not harness these powers in a lab set up by scientist schooled in the art of illusion and misdirection?
Don't chase rainbows and leprechauns. Study light refraction.
2007-11-15 16:54:33
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answer #2
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answered by The J Man 5
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1. Yes; several shows have played with this idea
2. Energy?
3. Yes, my biology teacher was the sponsor of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) in my high school
4. You need a boyfriend
5. Draw a self-portrait where you are pondering what to write about
6. If you believe in the Bible, there is plenty of evidence that dreams predict the future.
2007-11-15 16:34:04
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answer #3
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answered by ameeker 3
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1) Yes
2) It starts at the same place as it ends, just like there are no numbers, only all’s none’s and somewhere in-between’s (fractions).
3) Doesn’t care.
4) Doesn’t have this problem often, when we do… we do something. Problem solved.
5) As always passions.
6) Funny thing dreams or rather premonitions, as our mind ages we find that our premonitions and day-ja-vu are happening more frequently. Especially with gifts we give. Once herd that dreams are our minds defragmenting.
2007-11-15 17:09:44
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answer #4
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answered by grey_worms 7
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I read the questions and was disturbed. I began to pray and no one was there. The answers never came and now I am wondering what is going to happen to you and all the sudden my boredom has left. If dreams are seen in your waking life they will just medicate you. Dreams are as random as all the questions you have. The parts of you that make up the whole can be taken down by one irrational act. All of you pay for for stopping time.
2007-11-15 17:10:55
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answer #5
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answered by Pablo 6
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1.) haha, yes. i think.
2.) uhm, i guess if you're a religious person... god?
3.) scientists can believe in god, but they don't let it get in the way of any of their work.
4.) life is what you make of it. i've found life to be boring most of the time.
5.) draw weird pictures of people just walking. be picasso.
6.) dreams don't always mean anything. i've had a few cases where they actually point something out. but that's probably just a huge coincidence.
i like this question. it's fun.
2007-11-15 16:33:59
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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1. So-called "multiple personalities" are aspects, facets, of one's incarnated soulfield. Such is called in the Bible "warring in the members," and as such should receive Christ Jesus' Peace-commanding Presence ("Peace, be still and know that I AM God"). None of them should beat up on the others, but all should move toward Soul-realization http://www.yogananda-srf.org http://www.easwaran.org and suchlike.
2. God is Energy, among other Qualities, including divine Love, Truth, Purity, Joy, Justice, Mercy, Mind, and so on.
3. Many scientists believe in God (see, if you care to read, "God's Mechanics;" "Psychoenergetic Science," Dr. William Tiller, http://www.tiller.org "Extraordinary Knowing," Dr. Elizabeth Mayer, "Entangled Minds," Dr. Dean Radin, "The Reincarnation of Edgar Cayce?", Free and Wilcock http://www.divinecosmos.com ). Albert Einstein stated that "Science without religion is blind, religion without science is lame."
4. Dopamine patterns have a lot to do with boredom, which is a flatlining of dopamine activity in neurons. People who are spoiled tend to be dopamine abusers; championing your inner sense, your innocence, your better childlike joy, harmony, love, and so on, will give you more joy without having to resort to the bad sugar highs and "worse."
5. "We get ideas from books," among other places. Would suggest you consider illustrating scenes from C. S. Lewis' "The Great Divorce," a fun read, or scenes from Martha Beck's "Expecting Adam," a great and profound read on love, truth, and headucation, or scenes from "When Invisible Children Sing," by Dr. Huang.
Also, try listening to Ralph Vaughn Williams' "Fantasia on Greensleeves" and "Lark Ascending," and give impressions of them and you. Read O. M. Aivanhov's "Creation: Artistic and Spiritual" for further hints and helps.
Try appreciating and writing on the profound significance of Paulo Veronese's lifestyle (one of purity and dedication in a declining society). He is your friend.
Try illustrating some of the wonderful descriptions in Mark Prophet's "The Masters and Their Retreats."
6. If you keep a dream diary, well and good. Sometimes dreams are of the future, and rereading dreams of a week ago will prove revelatory along those lines. Also, a greatly spiritual artist and sculptor, Ann Ree Colton, spent most of her time counseling others. Her book, "Watch Your Dreams," contains lots of insights as to the various kinds of dreams (food-based, tv-based, angel telepathies, rewriting events of the day, revisiting memories, partial scenes of Schools of Light visited by the soul during her nightly out-of-body experience, etc.). Psychiatrist Olga Kharitidi's "The Master of Lucid Dreams" and "Dreams" by psychiatrist Marie-Louise von Franz (a colleague of Jung's) are also worthwhile.
If you like to learn while your body is resting (sleeping), simply ask God to protect, guide, and instruct you. There is a focus of art held in the etheric over the Statue of Liberty in NYC. Ask God and Archangel Michael to escort you there and return you safely to your room.
kind regards,
j.
2007-11-15 17:03:50
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answer #7
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answered by j153e 7
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