Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: David Marcus <DavidMarcus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 6 Dec 2006 01:06:15 -0500
Bob Kolker wrote:
Cantor has won his psycho-battle against Kronecker who eventually got
ill and gave up when Cantor got admired for his masterly
misinterpretation. Kronecker died already in 1891. It was perhaps
Cantor's own feeling to be possibly wrong which prompted his mental
breakdowns for the first time in 1884 after Cantor believed to have a
Depression is a purely physical/chemical condition. It is all about
seritonin re-uptake. There is strong evidence that depression is
hereditary.
I doubt it is solely hereditary. However, your point that chemistry is
very important to depression is well taken. Two people can have very
different reactions to the same events. And, there are effective
medications for depression.
There is no such thing as a mental disease since there is no
such thing as a mind. However the brain and nervous system, like any
other subsystem of the physical body is subject to disease and disfunction.
Analogy: mind is software, brain is hardware.
--
David Marcus
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Lester Zick
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Bob Kolker
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- References:
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Eckard Blumschein
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Virgil
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Eckard Blumschein
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Virgil
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Eckard Blumschein
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Virgil
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Eckard Blumschein
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Virgil
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Eckard Blumschein
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- From: Bob Kolker
- Re: Galileo's Paradox
- Prev by Date: Re: Need an unusual formula for wind vectors
- Next by Date: Re: Galileo's Paradox
- Previous by thread: Re: Galileo's Paradox
- Next by thread: Re: Galileo's Paradox
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|