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Post by Tekken on Aug 30, 2006 17:38:00 GMT -5
Ok, I've been noticing that while working with psi, it does not seem to behave like normal matter while interacting with our normal matter (soild, liquids, gases, and plasmas). Yet, while it doesn't work with normal objects, they seem to obey most of the physical laws when interacting with other psi materials.
This could be completely thought oriented because our brains have grown up and made connections with physical interactions, but would you think that psi has it's own set of laws or not?
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Post by monkey28164 on Aug 30, 2006 18:23:13 GMT -5
I would say it has its own laws. It falls outside of any law man has created. Its like a blackhole.
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Post by pazarx on Aug 31, 2006 20:27:58 GMT -5
black holes are simply stars that when they don't have enough energy to keep themselves glowing, combust under their own intense gravity. the gravity sucks everything in and obliterates it with unimaginable heat.
of course thats just what i believe.
as for psi having it's own rules... well of course it does we just have to begin to find out what those rules are.
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Post by monkey28164 on Aug 31, 2006 21:25:01 GMT -5
well a few theories state a couple things. One is instant transportation to a white whole. A common one about them all is that nothing that big should be that dense. Another thing is that black holes may leak matter.
Those are my views Im too tired to get into details but yeah
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Post by Ethereal Sphere on Sept 9, 2006 8:30:38 GMT -5
Well, if you think about, all things have their own laws. Inertia has it's own law, we just gave it a name after we understood what it was. Obviously psi energy isn't a solid, liquid, or gas. Years ago people didn't have any idea what "plasma" was. There will probably come a time when psi energy is accepted publicly, but until we can prove it exists in multiple controlled situations, it'll never happen.
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