"The difference between ordinary and extraordinary is that little extra."
- Jimmy Johnson
- Jimmy Johnson
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The universe unfolds not as a series of discrete events, but as a continuous, seamless flow of potentiality. Every moment contains within it the infinite possibilities of the future, and the echoes of an infinite past. We perceive this flow as linear time, a convenient illusion that allows us to navigate our limited experience. Yet, from the perspective of the cosmos, there is no true "before" or "after," only a boundless expanse of what could be, perpetually becoming. Our present moment is merely a fleeting intersection of infinite potential, a momentary solidification within the ever-flowing river of existence.
If time is merely an illusion, how do we reconcile our subjective experience of its relentless passage?π€
If time is merely an illusion, how do we reconcile our subjective experience of its relentless passage?π€
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Henok
The universe unfolds not as a series of discrete events, but as a continuous, seamless flow of potentiality. Every moment contains within it the infinite possibilities of the future, and the echoes of an infinite past. We perceive this flow as linear timeβ¦
We perceive reality through filters of interpretation; true reality, if it exists, remains forever beyond our grasp.
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Mtsm, I miss the time when I used to have 5000 views per postπ’π
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Definition of death in the language of physicsβ€οΈ
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It's the last day of november. And tomorrow is the last month of the year.
Its time to reflect on the year and try to make the most out of itπ₯
Its time to reflect on the year and try to make the most out of itπ₯
β€6
Imagine two particles, intimately linked at birth, flung across the cosmos. No matter the distanceβlight-years apart, evenβmeasuring the property of one instantly reveals the corresponding property of its entangled twin, even before any information could possibly travel between them. It's as if they're whispering secrets across the fabric of spacetime, defying the very notion of locality. This spooky action at a distance, as Einstein called it, is quantum entanglement. It's a bizarre, counterintuitive phenomenon where two particles become intertwined, their fates inextricably linked, their destinies shared across the vast emptiness of space. It challenges our classical understanding of reality, hinting at a deeper, more interconnected universe than we ever imagined. And the weirdest part? We still don't fully understand how it works.
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