I’m just not interested in digging up material about this.
Although, I don’t know why you feel like I disagree with you on the fraud of physical levitation. I’m not disputing that, you’re probably right.
I’m just not interested in digging up material about this.
Although, I don’t know why you feel like I disagree with you on the fraud of physical levitation. I’m not disputing that, you’re probably right.
The Wiki has spoken. That must prove conclusively that everything has been considered.
I thought you weren’t interested…or did you just mean you weren’t interested in backing up your theories? If you’ve got a different cite, let’s see it.
Mysticism is generally about esoteric truths that are usually spiritual/non-physical in nature.
The entire conversation about a physical bodies floating is for fools. While things out of our comprehension are possible, anyone trying to get kudos for defying gravity is just trying to compete with Michael Jordan. :dubious:
Theories are not facts that can be proven, they can only be promoted or disproven.
If you stop and think about it, your insistence on proving and stating facts is based on some human (that can be wrong) having made statements that eventually ended up on Wikipedia.
You’ve been going at me for a few post now, based on what? Logic? Incontrovertible truths? No… It’s been the fact that you found something on Wikipedia, and I didn’t bother to waste our time with it.
I’m from India. I know what fraud ends up in the public domain, and then Wikipedia. I’m not asking you to believe me about anything. Just entertain ideas that aren’t copied from another source - for the simple reason that they were copied from another source. Trust me, no one is going to end up floating in air because you take a minute to think outside of the box.
I don’t believe many here think out of the box. Science tells them what to think and they think it without question. I would love to visit India to see some of the metaphysical sights.
I remember reading the notes on a Catholic council meeting where they discussed banning a monk as a distraction. He kept flying around the room during the meeting.
It is said the happier one becomes the lighter he becomes. I was able to lift my arms and legs in meditation but not the whole me. My thoughts are open to all possibilities. We really know nothing about life. We fool ourselves with theories.
I can lift my arms and legs without any effort at all, and if you send me $500 I can teach you how to do it, too! I suppose any verification of this Catholic council meeting with the flying monk is out of the question? When? Where?
edited to add: I would have corrected you on your misuse of “theory”…but it’s been done so many times before.
You only say that because you can’t think out of the box and you follow the dictates of science without question. I remember reading on a message board that someone read notes of a Catholic council meeting where a monk was magically whizzing through the air because he was happy and thus lighter than air. The rest of the Council banned the flying monk because they couldn’t handle the distraction of a monk demonstrating world-changing magic powers (after apparently dutifully jotting the incident down in their minutes), which is exactly the sort of reaction one would expect to happen in such a situation. Open your mind, man. There’s so much amazing stuff out there— magnetic immortality bracelets, Time Cube, anything Deepak Chopra has ever said about anything— that a secret cabal of scientists are keeping from you because you can’t open your mind to the mysteries of the universe. Meanwhile, those of us who can think out of the box are going to live forever in a four-sided cube made out of quantum.
I can remember when science wasn’t just another religion way back in the 1960s.
That was before they solved the creation problems and told us how everything began.
Does this remind anyone else of Grandpa Simpson?
That’s not fair. Lekatt has figured out the SECRETS OF THE UNVIERSE!! and is only trying to enlighten you and the rest of the board, but you’re too educated stupid and evil to shed the religion of science and think out of the box to understand…well, whatever he’s talking about. (Seriously, magic flying monks that a Catholic board decided to cover up because they couldn’t handle the reality of it? Even Dan Brown would think that’s farfetched.)
So yeah, Grandpa Simpson. Back before the 1960s, scientists respected magic and ran their experiments with onions tied to their belts, which was the style at the time.