Astrology: Meaning of Date and Time of Birt by - TopicsExpress



          

Astrology: Meaning of Date and Time of Birt by akastrologyzone Wish life came with an instruction manual? Let me be your guide. The Weekday of Birth Correlation with Where We Are Inclined to Seek Fulfillment (An Original Theory) Sunday People born on Sunday tend to be particularly concerned with light (e.g. Ernst Mach, who is known for his study of sound, but who studied light much more; or Albert Michelson, who measured the speed of light several times and carried out the Michelson-Morley experiment—which involved sending two beams of light out from the earth, one in the direction the earth was moving, and one in the opposite direction, in order to measure the speed of light by measuring the ether that was believed to permeate space, much like water—and Edward Morley, with whom Michelson carried out the experiment, was born on a Monday, and so probably viewed this as a measure of the propagation of waves of light in a sea of ether), or with simplicity (e.g. Enrico Fermi, who always sought simple methods of approximation and conveyance of information when complex mathematics and theories could be avoided, such as when he estimated the strength of the blast of the first atomic explosion in the Manhattan Project by dropping some pieces of paper where he was in order to allow them to drift in the air when the blast wave came by; or Paul Ehrenfest, who sought clarity in simplicity, writing papers that each concerned only very few basic points and using simple examples and models to the exclusion of complex mathematics in his publications, his conversations, and his teaching; or Bernhard Riemann, who simplified physics by proposing a theory of higher dimensions; or John Archibald Wheeler, who sought to reduce all physical phenomena to the geometry of spacetime, and who coined such simplifying terms as “black hole” and “wormhole”, and who also proposed, with his idea of the wavefunction of the universe, that we bring the universe—both past and present—into being, essentially from nothing, through our observation and explanation of it), or with the creation or definition or formation of completely new worlds or other completely new things—either in their writing (e.g. Arthur C. Clarke, author of 2001: A Space Odyssey; or J. R. R. Tolkien, author of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings; or George Lucas, creator of Star Wars), or in the real world (e.g. Abraham Lincoln, who, in his words and actions, was pivotal in the formation of a United States without slavery; or Charles Darwin, who developed the theory of the evolution of entirely new species; or Jean Piaget, who described the developmental process for new human beings—the development of children from birth into beings with the capacity for logical and abstract thought)................................AK
Posted on: Sun, 21 Jul 2013 09:05:40 +0000

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