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| /*-9 wrote:
> simply put, fire is the *opposite* of
> water. fire acts in specific ways,
> water in other ways, when combined, depending
> on the amounts of either, one cancels the other
> out by the friction of their basic source structuralizations
> each element has properties which frictionalize it
> against other elemental properties. admixtural combinations
> of these frictionalized combinations produce objectivizationality
> to the tune of producing an appearance of humans,
> animals, plants, planets, solar systems,
> galaxies, universes, etc etc etc
The effect of the named combination is obvious in observation but it doesn't
provide an answer to why it happens. I have problem with the word
'opposite' too. Fire and water are 'opposite'. Why? I would say water and
ice-cream are opposite, according to your 'explanation'. What do you say?
I won't comment on the second paragraph.
Bee.
--
[I have found my Shangri-La in ntlworld.]
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