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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jul 7, 2015 10:57:46 GMT
Physics are often repeated in nature, and you can identify the physics from fractals of those physics. For example I explain granular convection hidden in nature as the outflow of trees, and feathers on birds. What does that mean? Well it means that there are quantum physics flowing out of grain structures as magnetic outflows, and those outflows allow biological matter to go against gravity... trees grow... feathers grow... through a grain structure. So when you look at a fish, and its scales, and its fins, and its gills you want to identify the outflow areas, and you can put pieces together from other places. The idea is to imagine a sponge with holes, and outflows that grow because they magnetically hold particles together. Here are some examples...
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jul 7, 2015 11:01:13 GMT
So I am looking at the alignment of scales, and gills in a fish, and instead of just jumping straight to evolution, I start with quantum physics, and try to estimate where outflows are coming from. Try the gills... All this means is that the in-flows, and out-flows of gravity, and magnetism create common shapes, and nature has used those shapes.
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Jul 8, 2015 12:49:30 GMT
If you are still left wondering how a tree relates to a fish it is because you are not used to thinking in my style. It is not the tree that relates to the fish, it is the alignment of physics produced from propagation through holes in grain structures. What you should really do is replace the tree with a worm, and then evolve the worm into salamander, and a fish by using its body as a grain structure. Then you get a HD 3D version of the fungus from the tree, and it is the HD 3D version that you identify from my simplified fungus images.
Pincho Paxton
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