The Death Thread from temp. It mustn't die Here's my initial OP:
Death, is it just your body dying, destructing, getting incapable of maintaining neccesary functions? Or is it something beyond that? Is there a soul? Then what is the soul? Is there a Nirvana, or...?
What are your thoughts of death? What do ou think will happen when you die?
I'm not really sure about what to think, and I'm sure lots of other people aren't sure either. Death is simply something our brains are incapable of imagining. We mammals are simply incapable of that. That's the cause of many bad things, and in a large bit of religion is based around death.
I've been a fan of reincarnation for many years, but lately I've started thinking that there maybe is a Nirvana of some kind. My imagination of Nirvana would be a place that you get to "configure" when you get there; basically whatever you have wished life to be like, it'd be like. Not 72 virgins or angels playing harp in the clouds, but every man (Or woman) has his own little heaven.
So, you?
Keep on arguing.
Death, is it just your body dying, destructing, getting incapable of maintaining neccesary functions? Or is it something beyond that? Is there a soul? Then what is the soul? Is there a Nirvana, or...?
What are your thoughts of death? What do ou think will happen when you die?
I'm not really sure about what to think, and I'm sure lots of other people aren't sure either. Death is simply something our brains are incapable of imagining. We mammals are simply incapable of that. That's the cause of many bad things, and in a large bit of religion is based around death.
I've been a fan of reincarnation for many years, but lately I've started thinking that there maybe is a Nirvana of some kind. My imagination of Nirvana would be a place that you get to "configure" when you get there; basically whatever you have wished life to be like, it'd be like. Not 72 virgins or angels playing harp in the clouds, but every man (Or woman) has his own little heaven.
So, you?
Keep on arguing.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP