(hai ca am glumit - dar, serios - asta cu "disappearing is an event" intra la categoria "harta fara repere"

Textual ar fi vorba de aparitia "chestiei". In general, orice modificare a "chestiei" careia ii poti atasa un loc si un timp la care s-a petrecut constituie un eveniment.vulp wrote:pai care este opusul disparitiei?
asta pot sa zic si eu........ "disparitia a ceva" e doar un joc de cuvinteIavo wrote:Well....disparitia a orice chiar e un eveniment. Disparitia "disparitiei" e doar un joc de cuvinte care o sa dispara in acelasi timp cu formele de inteligenta capabile sa inventeze concepte abstracte si paradoxuri lingvistice.
da, dar vezi ca nu exista "aparitia chestiei" decat "aparitia chestiei 1" sau "aparitia chestiei 2" si asa mai departe. asta in comparatie cu disparitia a ceva, a carei rezultat mereu va fi mereu aceeasi: disparitia... nu de alta, dar daca zicem in loc de "disparitia", "disparitia chestiei 1", nu mai putem sa zicem ca acea chestie nu mai exista - existenta sa va continua prin negarea existentei sale. sunt de acord cu tine ca "aparitia chestiei 1" -> "disparitia chestiei 1" este un eveniment, insa "aparitia chestiei 1" -> "disparitia" nu este un eveniment deoarece, similar, si "aparitia chestiei 2" -> "disparitia", si "aparitia chestiei 3" -> "disparitia" etc. deci "disparitia", in sensul mentionat in filmuletz, nu are opusWaaagh! wrote:Textual ar fi vorba de aparitia "chestiei". In general, orice modificare a "chestiei" careia ii poti atasa un loc si un timp la care s-a petrecut constituie un eveniment.vulp wrote:pai care este opusul disparitiei?
cine a vorbit de filtrarea experimentelor? aceeasi experiment poate fi interpretat in ambele feluri, in fiecare caz.Waaagh! wrote:N-ai nevoie de termodinamica pentru a-ti stabili o masura a timpului prin care-ti filtrezi experientele. E totodata limpede ca o continuitate a existentei "chestiei" in memoria referentialului nu este totuna cu existenta ei fizica, ori in discutie aici era a doua notiune, care de altfel e singura observabila.
Sa mori tu?Iavo wrote:"Disparitia a ceva" nu e un joc de cuvinte.
Pai da, exact, eu din ce ai zis tu am pornitIavo wrote:"nu mai putem sa zicem ca acea chestie nu mai exista - existenta sa va continua prin negarea existentei sale."
Esti sigur ca nu ai inclus omul aici? Si ai facut-o de mai devreme dar nu o sa incerc sa explic a treia oara acelasi lucru.
They discovered adding a small amount of dried seaweed to a cow's diet can reduce the amount of methane a cow produces by up to 99 per cent.
The system is said to be able to suck in air from a 300-metre radius -- and from up to seven kilometres (over four miles) upwards. It can treat some 800,000 cubic metres of air an hour, filtering out 100 percent of fine particles and 95 percent percent of ultra-fine particles, the company said, referring to tests carried out by the Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands (ECN) on its prototype.
The Hubble Space Telescope has given humanity unprecedented glimpses into the universe, but it will soon be replaced by a far more powerful model. NASA administrator Charles Bolden unveiled the completed $8.8 billion James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which will be able to see the universe as it was 13 billion years ago. It's equipped with a 21-foot, gold-coated mirror array that can collect seven times more light than Hubble and scan the infrared spectrum to see through dust. "We've done two decades of innovation and hard work, and this is the result," project scientist John Mather says.
On top of peering into the deepest, oldest regions of the universe, the telescope has enough power to hunt for habitable exoplanets. "We'd like to know if another planet out there has enough water to have an ocean, and we think we can do that," says Mather. Thanks to its relatively large, extremely smooth mirror -- which would have defects just a few inches high if stretched to the size of the United States -- it has enough power to detect a bumblebee on the moon.
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