Re: How many main religious Festivities are there?

From: Dirk Bruere at Neopax (dirk_at_neopax.com)
Date: 12/18/04


Date: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 14:20:47 +0000

hanson wrote:

> "Uncle Al" <UncleAl0@hate.spam.net> wrote in message
> news:41C39DBC.94ACD66E@hate.spam.net...
>
>>hanson wrote:
>>
>>>Religions in order of app. size
>>>
>>>Religion Festivity
>>>-------------------------
>>>Taoists .....
>>>Hindus ......
>>>Xians ........ Christmas
>>>Muslims.... Ramadan
>>>Shintos......
>>>Blacks ....... Kwanzaa
>>>Nordic..... Yule Tide
>>>Jews ......... Hanukkah
>>>
>>>what else is there?
>>
> [Uncle Al]
>
>>Chanukah. Look at the Hebrew (left to right, twit).
>>http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/religion.htm
>>
>
> [hanson]
> Your intellectual website doesn't mention neither Chanukah
> nor Hebrew, nor twit. But your know-how about *** seems
> to be boundless. The closest one applicable to you would be:
> "Judaism ...... Why does *** always happen to me?"
> .....AHAHAHAHA..... ahahaha.... and you mean, you do not
> why that is so? That then would make YOU being a certified
> twit.... past, present and future... in either direction...
> ahahaha.... ahahahanson
>
> PS:
> After looking at your "religion vs. ***" website I checked your
> ref to Eotvoes. http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/eotvos.htm
> Under the "Introduction" in the equations for mass = sqrt(p_x...
> I'd recommend for your to put in ".. wherein 'p' stands for...."
>
> Not to rain on your parade, Al, and on the inordinate time you
> have put into your endeavor in the hope that it may or may not
> shake the foundations of physics, I fear that even with a clear
> earthshaking outcome, all the theories will be preserved simply
> by redefining the concept/nature of mass. BUT, such a need for
> redefining mass would probably be THE profound & important
> payoff. Practical and technological consequences of a change at such
> a fundamental level would be indeed and truly revolutionary.
>
> Happy Chanukah, the Hebrew kind, to you (left to right, twit).
> hanson
>

IMO we are rather overdue for a new scientific revolution in fundamental
physics. The position seems to be just like it was almost exactly 100yrs ago.

-- 
Dirk
The Consensus:-
The political party for the new millenium
http://www.theconsensus.org

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