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Post by Pincho Paxton on Dec 26, 2013 12:09:49 GMT
Thoughts meander like streams, and like streams they create grooves, and those grooves become habits. If your daily routine starts to take on a daily cycle you can get trapped in the valley of thoughts. Breaking free of the valley becomes more difficult the longer you allow is to flow. Although we like the idea of free will, a valley will take over our daily life. The artist, and the mathematician share a fork road in that valley. The more you like art the more difficult it becomes to fork that valley towards maths, and the more you like maths the less creative you will become. It is for this reason that science needs artists, and mathematicians. Allow people to fit into their best position, and work together as a unit. Why aren't children always like their parents? Richard Feynman appears to have a father who fitted into the creative groove, and Richard therefore worked as a team to fit into the mathematical groove. You want to impress your parent, and you can do this by using the grooves that your parent is not using so much.
Pincho paxton
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Dec 26, 2013 13:13:53 GMT
Richard Feynman also worked his way into art quite successfully. What you now get is a V shaped Groove. This alleviates pressures in other parts of the brain. You need to maintain some pressure like a hose pipe, so trying to be everything will just slow your sharpness down in other areas. I don't really try to be a mathematician, although I was born a mathematical genius. I later changed the fork to art. I was about 10, so my art groove is strong, and my maths groove is weakened.
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Post by Janis Joplin on Dec 26, 2013 20:38:40 GMT
Groovy !
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