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To: smolejv@gmx.net who wrote (35754)7/5/2003 3:47:43 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74559
 
DJ, have you ever tried one of those 3D pictures which just look like a jumble of patterns until you can make each eye point separately so that the image forms into a 3D picture which isn't evident at all from the 2D patterns?

<Our NZ uncle Dagobert swimming in the monetized riches of this world. And then your thoughts.

Its one and the same money and one and the same world - right? However hard I try, I cant see double, should I see optometrist? .
>

This is a similar problem to the 3D image problem. You have to make your brain see both imagines simultaneously which will make the pattern resolve into the complete image. It's tricky, but a lot of fun and worth the effort.

As usual Google, knows all and here is a sample with instructions on how to do it. There are plenty of other images too. magiceye.com

As you might be able to see in that sample, there are hundreds of stars orbiting a spherical mass made up of heaps more stars. As Jay pointed out to me, we need to think in terms of spheres rather than straight lines. Each star is like a person with their little light shining in the firmament. Some are orbiting around and others are in the centre. Together, we make up the whole.

Without the ability to see the 3D image, it just looks like a straight line 2D image with a bunch of random stars, which is what most people see when they look at all the $$$s flying around in all directions. When they see the two true views, combined into the holistic whole, they will see how too many stars being printed could create a black hole due to excessive graviational force at which time the whole lot falls into a singularity.

There's no need for an optometrist. Just the true view. As you say, there is only one world. You just need to combine the two worlds, which seem separate, into one world.

Uncle Al KBE is like God, producing the raw materials for the Saturn-like picture.

You get all the answers in this stream.

Mqurice



To: smolejv@gmx.net who wrote (35754)7/5/2003 5:21:56 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
DJ, <<Diversity rules OK. And the survival of the fittest>>

Maurice's fate, unless he repents, will soon be sealed, and ready for pickup at the nearest Walmart store:0)

A friend just sent me this message, "I got a 27 yr old former derivatives trader, Univ. of Texas grad, young Canto guy now earning $7k as our doorman at MacDonnell Road)."

HK$ 7k is USD 900. In HK, the freest economy in the world, costs adjust rapidly. The doorman, working as a derivatives trader, was probably earning north of USD 9000/month when he was 24. No system-wide devaluation necessary, yet.

Chugs, Jay