Thing about me is, I don't have intentions. I just create. It's in a [bracket]. How it connects throughout the continuum I don't know, except it's not really a continuum but more like music, where a theme is hinted at but not expressed, whose intention is uncertain until unveiled - if it ever is, and comprehension is not gained until finality and then, like a butterfly effect, memory backfills to origin, uncovering purpose and intent, which is unknown to the author at the origin point. == I like Brian Greene but he's missing some very interesting possibilities there. He's limited to expanding block view/arrow view, which is fine for what he does for a living but it's not the only way to look at things. == "at least we don't think we have". He can feel safe and secure if he likes and he can reassure his fandom that that's the case. If it works for you, go for it. == I've been a Doctor Who fan since I was 8 yrs old. I just turned 44. Been turning Time over in my head for a long time now, not restricted in my area of study to Theoretical Physics. [I almost was], like Brian Greene is. == Professionals are often biased in their worldview because their profession provides a lens through which they see reality. It doesn't invalidate but it does provide constraints they follow, often unknowingly because they are within a particular universe which has cohesiveness, a community, etc etc. So, for example: it's natural to expect Dawkins to see everything as evolution. He's the strongest example because it's so obvious tongue emoticon == I like professionals. They're good at what they're good at. But when they step out of their fields, they sometimes sound really.. odd ... to outsiders. See: Hawking when he's not talking about black hole physics. I like him but... wow... some things he says are like... woah, really? === love rhymes and rhythms - I hate how the two words in English are hard to spell and look alike. ==