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Published: 2005-11-13 16:38:59 +0000 UTC; Views: 1379; Favourites: 22; Downloads: 230
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theory of knowledgeRelated content
Comments: 6
atribeofone [2006-06-27 21:07:33 +0000 UTC]
your entire gallery is breathtaking - some of the most inspired and rich images I've ever seen.
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lintrhino [2005-11-15 06:03:27 +0000 UTC]
then agin.. some belive that the fruit of the tree of knowlege was a pommegranit...and a fig... and yes... an apple
(dang teotonic interpertaions of middle eastern texts.)
how he manages to manipulate light like this *every single time* is beyond me... must be relly quick with his hands
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shteyn [2005-11-13 21:43:54 +0000 UTC]
I suppose a first glance interpretation could yield that in the kitchen of life, true knowledge is the hammer which comes crashing down upon thoughts that man holds firmly as his feet hold the ground, and he is never the same again. Now a broken being among his peers, some ideas, memories, desires lost forever, and others are just enough out of reach to keep a drop of faith alive in his rotting body, a test against the concept of time.
But what if man is born broken, left to his own choice to freely mend his mind by the tools of his own invention, for all the tools of others are mere hammers which keep him broken. That everything in the natural world which has a cause achieved its effect by an uphill battle, and that which takes the easy way down never knows what it is like to be whole, for it never knew what it means to be broken. That if the fragments of your highest have bled out, leaving lifeless seeds in their wake, to plant them in fertile soil is the hardest choice man can make, as a hammer can make or break.
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NaamahsServant In reply to shteyn [2005-11-14 14:25:09 +0000 UTC]
That is straight on what I was thinking but could not say, so here's a basic ditto on the interpretation of shteyn.
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equivoque [2005-11-13 17:39:52 +0000 UTC]
nice title, nice reference, very good to look at indeed.
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