Anonymous ID: 299cf1 Nov. 5, 2018, 10:57 p.m. No.3754032   🗄️.is 🔗kun

These books of war I conjure contort

Cohort the enemy to subvert friends

A man of many men's who will go to any ends

Freedom- like mind space visual optics

 

I see them

As soon as I hit R.E.M.

Golden eggs from many hens

I pretend to bend reality

essence self contained within

 

Mind sentenced like prison pens

Sent the message check the records again

Freedom comes cheap with the wave of a pen

Legend says that kings wore crowns on they head but I believe that true kingdoms come from within.

 

Ten rules, zen pools, king cruel, the grass ain't always greener when the only meals gruel.

Meet the fool, meat makes you cool, winding time up in many spools ending up in plenty jewels.

Equal amounts of coal, burning blistering cold, growing eternally old-

the paradox that will twist your tongue off that's ice to a pole.

Anonymous ID: 299cf1 Nov. 5, 2018, 11:07 p.m. No.3754100   🗄️.is 🔗kun

To summarize their conclusions, Terence and Dennis postulated that "all phenomena are at root

constellated by a waveform that is the hierarchical summation of its constituent parts, morphogenetic patterns related to those in DNA."

Basically, that time is an objective apparatus acting as a wave (instead of the linear line framework we get from historiography) and that all events and

thought forms are the development of that wave's motion.

 

The back and forth motion, or crest and trough, of this wave is represented by critical moments in

history they call novelty: the discovery of fire, the birth of agriculture, the creation of the Mona Lisa, the invention of the steam engine, the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, and so on.

 

"Time is a topological manifold over which events must flow subject to the constraints of the manifold […] by examining time from this point of view we can see when in history great outbreaks of novelty occurred."

 

(7) Within this waveform the brothers found a pattern of novelty, a cycle in which the time spans

become shorter and shorter. When this pattern ends it becomes a singularity, a zero point. Using a computer program they wrote, the McKenna brothers traced zero point to an approximate location on our calendar and found it correlating with the end of the Mayan Calendar on December 22, 2012.