THE GRAND PROJEKT of APEIRON - Apeiron Centre (AC)
  http://www.apeironcentre.org/html/index.php
  " The standard position of mainstream  empirical science is to exclude the infinite and its inverse, nothing  (zero), which is the infinite according to division. Nature or the  physical body is simple and finite and nothing finite is infinite! There  is no infinite body, no Infinite One! 
 
     
  This Aristotelian finite-analytic worldview is incapable of  understanding the physical world’s indeterminate and complex nature and  generates in science infinitely regressing absurdities. Given the crisis  in the finite-analytic foundation of empirical science, the new trend  is to return to the first thinkers of Greece (the school of Ionia),  India (the Upanishads) and China (the school of Tao), who laid down  simultaneously and independently the first spiritual foundations of  humanity. These three regions formed at the dawn of philosophy (sixth to  fifth century BCE) the axis of the apeiron, or Infinite One.  According totheir first intuitions about the physical world, which were  the most powerful and true, the Infinite One is the principle and  substance, the source and destination of the physical universe. As a  complex principle, the Infinite One ensures the unity of the physical  whole’s opposite poles, the finite and the infinite, as well as the  permanence of its life and motion. As a complex substance of all things,  the Infinite One allows us to affirm without absurdity that (a)  everything finite is infinite, (b) that all finite quantities have  infinite magnitudes, (c) that a finite spherical body of radius 1 is  simultaneously infinite (according to extension and division).       Finally, we call, infinite-synthetic paradigm the emerging  non-Aristotelian model of the physical universe according to which  everything is complex, verifies synthetic principles of existence, and  is both finite and infinite. Because the infinite-synthetic paradigm  abolishes one-way time and its analytic hierarchy generating unsolvable  conflicts, it is regarded as the natural response to society’s  contradictions and evils."
      
   
    
No comments:
Post a Comment