The other day I went to see a very bright and experienced
psychiatrist who told me that if a brain is injured the non-injured parts
develop to be stronger to make up for what doesn't participate (due to injury) anymore,
of course this made me very happy (as always when I'm found to be correct by
somebody well respected) and begs me to ask to the plenty respected and
experienced psychologists who have been saying that once a brain is injured
nothing can be learned or done/processed anymore.
In fact I have to say that not only I've been studying and
learning very much about quantum theories (physics and mathematics) but
I've been frequently exchanging emails with real philosophers, who deal with me
and my questions just like I was one of them.
This actually begs me to say that when my friend Iacopo says
(for reasons completely different from mine) that if people would realize that
their conscience is immortal, the entire world would totally change overnight.
To me (and my illogic injured brain) it matters not the way he arrives to this
consideration simply because human thoughts are just like math, or it matters
not the way a problem, or function is resolved, what counts is only the result
and therefore given that both our conclusions are identical it really doesn't
matter if I use Catholicism while he uses its opposite (atheism), what only
matters is that we agree on the end result of our thinking.
Following my Catholic logic I therefore say that if someone
could realize what it means to spend (as soul) eternity in hell, the entire
world would change overnight, same following Iacopo's hypothesis of the same
conscience being reborn into lives that can be worse than the one left behind
(by death).
For me to say who I wish could understand what I mean would
be completely pointless, because it's just a matter of time before this can be
figured out personally.
- http://www.quora.com/How-would-you-live-your-life-considering-the-following
- http://xroads.virginia.edu/~hyper2/thoreau/life.html
- http://areason.org/
- http://theconversation.com/living-life-as-an-artist-nietzsche-on-creativity-36257
- https://www.lds.org/general-conference/2012/10/consider-the-blessings?lang=eng
- http://thoreau.eserver.org/walden02.html
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