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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Aug 10, 2023 17:34:03 GMT
What is the new? How can something new to appear? I mean, it is possible that something really new can become ontologically present? Or anything that exists exists eternally? For instance, concept of our university and the whole history of it may be just a God's concept. I also think this proverb asks this question clearly:
"What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun" (Ecclesiastes 1:9)
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Post by MAYA-EL on Aug 15, 2023 3:29:59 GMT
Can you define specifically in what you mean by new?
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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Aug 19, 2023 10:49:49 GMT
Can you define specifically in what you mean by new? I do apologize for rare answers. As soon as I'll be more free I try to answer. The new is indeed hard term to explain. I guess it is something that appears firstly. Like, the flight of a man to the Moon.
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Post by jonbain on Aug 23, 2023 20:24:30 GMT
What few get is that Ecclesiastes is actually a book of atheist philosophy, albeit one in the 'bible'.
How would an atheist like Ecclesiastes claim to know about all of the cosmos?
The multiverses are infinite, and thus, not only is new possible, but it is inevitable, nothing ever is as it was before.
Everything all the time is new all the time.
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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Sept 21, 2023 7:27:01 GMT
What few get is that Ecclesiastes is actually a book of atheist philosophy, albeit one in the 'bible'. How would an atheist like Ecclesiastes claim to know about all of the cosmos? The multiverses are infinite, and thus, not only is new possible, but it is inevitable, nothing ever is as it was before. Everything all the time is new all the time. I never thought of that in that key. But didn't Solomon write the book? They say at the end of his life he turned into an atheism or something. So, it might be that this book was written after his turn.
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