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Thread: Project Illogic - the artist, the legend : Q & A session

  1. #76
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    I bet you haven't taken any photos with guns blazing in front of a fridge and microwave though, busta?











  2. #77

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    back in elementary school there was a giant hill that went down from the top of the playground plus there was so much land after that we were able to play smear the queer or fight and thats all we use to do thats hard to remember. he didn't even remember what it was like that far but i was sidekick the the biggest troublemaker bully tough kid in the entire school you know it was me and him but the last time i even thought about that was ancient

  3. #78

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    in kindegarten one time i brought a knive to school i got from my grandpa and i pulled it on somebody and they got the teacher and it was taken away but nothing was said about it ever again weird

  4. #79

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    i remember one time im with the toughest kid in school and some mother fucker wooped me and he walked away and jessie foutch says fucking get him and i tackeled him from behind and he went unconscious

  5. #80

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    Retired.

  6. #81
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    project, I suggest you watch this










  7. #82

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    so im by the time in like im 13 or 14 ive read so many 500 page books ive read like 50 different goosbumps books they only took an hour to read. but back around that time that young there was a site called http://www.cuttingedge.org/ and ive read like 100 diffferent pages if only i knew what the fuck i read but everything came true and when september 11th hit i instantley realized they had fullfilled their plan and shit. its like a time capsel this site was big in the times before september 11th if you wanna learn occult secret numerology and shit even though they reveal it to you its a christian web site so its bad are or something but thats where i picked it up from...............and i know there were times it was accessed by the white house and shit but i dont know how many times

  8. #83

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    but why should the occult be for the devil only i dont worship numbers or coicidences i simply document them as they occur i read "the celestine prophecy" that explains the concept of syncircity. heres a different type of occult but this one claims to be good.
    i read at like 12 or 13 a book called "the celestine prophecy" which was all about the theory of syncricity

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchronicity

    Synchronicity is a concept first explained by psychiatrist Carl Jung, which holds that events are "meaningful coincidences" if they occur with no causal relationship, yet seem to be meaningfully related.[1] During his career, Jung furnished several slightly different definitions of it.[2]

    Jung variously defined synchronicity as an "acausal connecting (togetherness) principle," "meaningful coincidence", and "acausal parallelism." He introduced the concept as early as the 1920s but gave a full statement of it only in 1951 in an Eranos lecture.[3]

    In 1952, he published a paper "Synchronizität als ein Prinzip akausaler Zusammenhänge" (Synchronicity – An Acausal Connecting Principle)[4] in a volume which also contained a related study by the physicist and Nobel laureate Wolfgang Pauli.[5]

    Jung's belief was that, just as events may be connected by causality, they may also be connected by meaning. Events connected by meaning need not have an explanation in terms of causality. This contradicts the Axiom of Causality in specific cases but not generally.

    Jung used the concept to try to justify the paranormal.[6]

    A believer in the paranormal, Arthur Koestler wrote extensively on synchronicity in his 1972 book The Roots of Coincidence.[7]

    Contents [hide]
    1 Description
    2 Examples
    3 Relationship with causality
    4 Criticisms
    5 Publications
    6 See also
    7 References
    8 Bibliography
    9 External links
    Description[edit]

    Diagram illustrating Carl Jung's concept of synchronicity
    Jung coined the word "synchronicity" to describe "temporally coincident occurrences of acausal events."

    In his book Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle, Jung wrote:[8]

    How are we to recognize acausal combinations of events, since it is obviously impossible to examine all chance happenings for their causality? The answer to this is that acausal events may be expected most readily where, on closer reflection, a causal connection appears to be inconceivable.
    In the introduction to his book, Jung on Synchronicity and the Paranormal, Roderick Main wrote:[6]

    The culmination of Jung's lifelong engagement with the paranormal is his theory of synchronicity, the view that the structure of reality includes a principle of acausal connection which manifests itself most conspicuously in the form of meaningful coincidences. Difficult, flawed, prone to misrepresentation, this theory none the less remains one of the most suggestive attempts yet made to bring the paranormal within the bounds of intelligibility. It has been found relevant by psychotherapists, parapsychologists, researchers of spiritual experience and a growing number of non-specialists. Indeed, Jung's writings in this area form an excellent general introduction to the whole field of the paranormal.
    In his book Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle, Jung wrote:[8]

    ...it is impossible, with our present resources, to explain ESP, or the fact of meaningful coincidence, as a phenomenon of energy. This makes an end of the causal explanation as well, for "effect" cannot be understood as anything except a phenomenon of energy. Therefore it cannot be a question of cause and effect, but of a falling together in time, a kind of simultaneity. Because of this quality of simultaneity, I have picked on the term "synchronicity" to designate a hypothetical factor equal in rank to causality as a principle of explanation.
    Synchronicity was a principle which, Jung felt, gave conclusive evidence for his concepts of archetypes and the collective unconscious.[9] It described a governing dynamic which underlies the whole of human experience and history — social, emotional, psychological, and spiritual. The emergence of the synchronistic paradigm was a significant move away from Cartesian dualism towards an underlying philosophy of double-aspect theory. It has been argued that this shift was essential to bringing theoretical coherence to Jung's earlier work.[10][11]

    Even at Jung's presentation of his work on synchronicity in 1951 at an Eranos lecture, his ideas on synchronicity were evolving. On Feb. 25, 1953, in a letter to Carl Seelig, the Swiss author and journalist who wrote a biography of Albert Einstein. Jung wrote, “Professor Einstein was my guest on several occasions at dinner. . . These were very early days when Einstein was developing his first theory of relativity [and] It was he who first started me on thinking about a possible relativity of time as well as space, and their psychic conditionality. More than 30 years later the stimulus led to my relation with the physicist professor W. Pauli and to my thesis of psychic synchronicity.”[4] Following discussions with both Albert Einstein and Wolfgang Pauli, Jung believed that there were parallels between synchronicity and aspects of relativity theory and quantum mechanics.[12] Jung was transfixed by the idea that life was not a series of random events but rather an expression of a deeper order, which he and Pauli referred to as Unus mundus. This deeper order led to the insights that a person was both embedded in an orderly framework and was the focus of that orderly framework and that the realisation of this was more than just an intellectual exercise, but also had elements of a spiritual awakening. From the religious perspective, synchronicity shares similar characteristics of an "intervention of grace". Jung also believed that in a person's life, synchronicity served a role similar to that of dreams, with the purpose of shifting a person's egocentric conscious thinking to greater wholeness.


    Lewis Carroll
    A close associate of Jung, Marie-Louise von Franz, stated towards the end of her life that the concept of synchronicity must now be worked on by a new generation of researchers.[13] For example, in the years since the publication of Jung’s work on synchronicity, some writers largely sympathetic to Jung's approach have taken issue with certain aspects of his theory, including the question of how frequently synchronicity occurs.

    One of Jung's favourite quotes[14] on synchronicity was from Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll, in which the White Queen says to Alice: "It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards."[15]

    "The rule is, jam to-morrow and jam yesterday—but never jam to-day."
    "It MUST come sometimes to 'jam to-day,'" Alice objected.
    "No, it can't," said the Queen. "It's jam every OTHER day: to-day isn't any OTHER day, you know."
    "I don't understand you," said Alice. "It's dreadfully confusing!"
    "That's the effect of living backwards," the Queen said kindly: "it always makes one a little giddy at first—"
    "Living backwards!" Alice repeated in great astonishment. "I never heard of such a thing!"
    "—but there's one great advantage in it, that one's memory works both ways."
    "I'm sure MINE only works one way," Alice remarked. "I can't remember things before they happen."
    "It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards," the Queen remarked.
    Examples[edit]

    Cetonia aurata
    In his book Synchronicity (1952), Jung tells the following story as an example of a synchronistic event:

    My example concerns a young woman patient who, in spite of efforts made on both sides, proved to be psychologically inaccessible. The difficulty lay in the fact that she always knew better about everything. Her excellent education had provided her with a weapon ideally suited to this purpose, namely a highly polished Cartesian rationalism with an impeccably “geometrical” idea of reality. After several fruitless attempts to sweeten her rationalism with a somewhat more human understanding, I had to confine myself to the hope that something unexpected and irrational would turn up, something that would burst the intellectual retort into which she had sealed herself. Well, I was sitting opposite her one day, with my back to the window, listening to her flow of rhetoric. She had an impressive dream the night before, in which someone had given her a golden scarab — a costly piece of jewellery. While she was still telling me this dream, I heard something behind me gently tapping on the window. I turned round and saw that it was a fairly large flying insect that was knocking against the window-pane from outside in the obvious effort to get into the dark room. This seemed to me very strange. I opened the window immediately and caught the insect in the air as it flew in. It was a scarabaeid beetle, or common rose-chafer (Cetonia aurata), whose gold-green colour most nearly resembles that of a golden scarab. I handed the beetle to my patient with the words, "Here is your scarab." This experience punctured the desired hole in her rationalism and broke the ice of her intellectual resistance. The treatment could now be continued with satisfactory results.[16]
    The French writer Émile Deschamps claims in his memoirs that, in 1805, he was treated to some plum pudding by a stranger named Monsieur de Fontgibu. Ten years later, the writer encountered plum pudding on the menu of a Paris restaurant and wanted to order some, but the waiter told him that the last dish had already been served to another customer, who turned out to be de Fontgibu. Many years later, in 1832, Deschamps was at a dinner and once again ordered plum pudding. He recalled the earlier incident and told his friends that only de Fontgibu was missing to make the setting complete – and in the same instant, the now senile de Fontgibu entered the room.[17]

    Jung wrote, after describing some examples, "When coincidences pile up in this way, one cannot help being impressed by them – for the greater the number of terms in such a series, or the more unusual its character, the more improbable it becomes."[18]


    Wolfgang Pauli
    In his book Thirty Years That Shook Physics – The Story of Quantum Theory (1966), George Gamow writes about Wolfgang Pauli, who was apparently considered a person particularly associated with synchronicity events. Gamow whimsically refers to the "Pauli effect", a mysterious phenomenon which is not understood on a purely materialistic basis, and probably never will be. The following anecdote is told:

    It is well known that theoretical physicists cannot handle experimental equipment; it breaks whenever they touch it. Pauli was such a good theoretical physicist that something usually broke in the lab whenever he merely stepped across the threshold. A mysterious event that did not seem at first to be connected with Pauli's presence once occurred in Professor J. Franck's laboratory in Göttingen. Early one afternoon, without apparent cause, a complicated apparatus for the study of atomic phenomena collapsed. Franck wrote humorously about this to Pauli at his Zürich address and, after some delay, received an answer in an envelope with a Danish stamp. Pauli wrote that he had gone to visit Bohr and at the time of the mishap in Franck's laboratory his train was stopped for a few minutes at the Göttingen railroad station. You may believe this anecdote or not, but there are many other observations concerning the reality of the Pauli Effect! [19]
    Relationship with causality[edit]
    Causality, when defined expansively (as for instance in the "mystic psychology" book The Kybalion, or in the platonic Kant-style Axiom of Causality), states that "nothing can happen without being caused." Such an understanding of causality is incompatible with synchronicity.

    Other definitions of causality (for example, the neo-Humean definition) are concerned only with the relation of cause to effect. As such, they are compatible with synchronicity.

    There are also opinions which hold that, where there is no external observable cause, the cause can be internal.[20]

    It is also pointed out, that since Jung took into consideration only the narrow definition of causality: only the efficient cause, his notion of "acausality" is also narrow and so is not applicable to final and formal causes as understood in Aristotelian or Thomist systems.[21] The final causality is inherent[22] in synchronicity (because it leads to individuation) or synchronicity can be a kind of replacement for final causality, such finalism is often controversial in science.

    Criticisms[edit]
    Critics assert that standard science, causality, physics, statistics, and probability (for instance, Littlewood's law or the law of truly large numbers) suffice to explain alleged (in Jung definition) "synchronistic" events, it doesn't mean that similar events can not exist (see for instance: mathematical coincidence) but the explanation as synchronicity is criticized, so the term coincidences is used instead.[23][24] They deem them to be normal events of low probability, when a single sample is being considered. And for a truly large number of samples, such events are likely to happen. For example, David Hand criticizes the use of the term to explain them.[23]

    Among some psychologists, Jung's works, such as The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche, were received as problematic. Fritz Levi, in his 1952 review in Neue Schweizer Rundschau (New Swiss Observations), critiqued Jung's theory of synchronicity as vague in determinability of synchronistic events, saying that Jung never specifically explained his rejection of "magic causality" to which such an acausal principle as synchronicity would be related. He also questioned the theory's usefulness.[25]

    In psychology and cognitive science, confirmation bias is a tendency to search for or interpret new information in a way that confirms one's preconceptions, and avoids information and interpretations that contradict prior beliefs. It is a type of cognitive bias and represents an error of inductive inference, or is a form of selection bias toward confirmation of the hypothesis under study, or disconfirmation of an alternative hypothesis. Confirmation bias is of interest in the teaching of critical thinking, as the skill is misused if rigorous critical scrutiny is applied only to evidence that challenges a preconceived idea, but not to evidence that supports it.[26]

    Likewise, in psychology and sociology, the term apophenia is used for the apparent detection of a pattern or meaning in random or meaningless data.[27] Skeptics, such as Robert Todd Carroll of the Skeptic's Dictionary, argue that the perception of synchronicity is better explained as apophenia. Primates use pattern detection in their form of intelligence,[28] and this can lead to erroneous identification of non-existent patterns. A famous example of this is the fact that human face recognition is so robust, and based on such a basic archetype (essentially two dots and a line contained in a circle), that human beings are very prone to identify faces in random data all through their environment, like the "man in the moon", or faces in wood grain, an example of the visual form of apophenia known as pareidolia

  9. #84

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    first in the navy the most famous part of the kaidence is "i said a hip hop and a lollipop let me see that left foot drop." then theres the song lil wayne lollipop which is the most significant song for me. then i meet this chick and she got "lollipop" on her tramp stamp with the same first and last name as my mother. she had the same nickname as one of my friends i always hung out with

  10. #85

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    like thats just one example

  11. #86

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    when in bootcamp they had the new barracks and the old ones and the old ones were old school male only and the other coed. they had the new ones and old ones but they were tearning down the old barracks. we were the last unit to go through our old school barracks before they tore it done. in navy, our BESS division was the last time anybody ever went through old school BESS beccause the next round of recruits went to the new computer based BESS. i was discarged 3-3-2009 and 33 is a number important to numerolgy

  12. #87

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sideshow Bob View Post
    one time we had a cat and a german short hair and we came home and the cat was nursing the dogs penis and he was just legs spread out on the couch that was pretty fucking funny lmfao true story

  13. #88

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    yeah so my dad works for a printing company and he installs all the equipment some of that shit cost over 5 million for the machine and he fixes and maintains them too and installs presses and machines to other companys on the side as well as anyhing else. he built his own house with just his friends and wired it personally. that fucker knows how to work on cars what dosen't he know
    Last edited by project tillogic; 01-01-2016 at 07:50 PM.

  14. #89

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    heres a link to everything you need to know in how to deal with cops that i read which has allwed me to never get in any trouble hardley ever in my entire life my record is squeaky fucking clean and it says i have paranoid schizophrenia so you know the cops treat me fucking special. ive also done more drugs than most people my entire life the difference is that i never get caught they can only catch you if you slip and i never do im good at what i do

    https://www.erowid.org/freedom/police/police.shtml

    Credit Card Memberships
    Am I Under Arrest? Am I Free to Go?
    Police in Modern America
    Know your rights.
    Always be polite and courteous to police.
    Ask to call your lawyer: never talk about, admit or deny anything.
    Do not consent to a search unless the police have a warrant. Be extremely clear.
    Ask "Am I under Arrest? Am I Free to Go?"
    GENERAL INFORMATION #
    Police - Bits and Pieces
    INTERACTING WITH POLICE #
    Talking to Cops
    Interacting with Police, by a mother and prison psychologist
    Guidelines for Saying No to Police Searches
    What to Do if You Get Stopped by the Police
    I Do Not Consent To A Search
    Police Encounters in Airports
    Avoiding and Defending Against Pot Prosecutions
    How To Avoid Getting Busted
    MYTHS #
    Do Undercover Police Have to Identify Themselves?
    RELATED VAULTS #
    Laws and the Legal System
    Asset Forfeiture
    Psychoactives, War, & Covert Operations
    Capsaicin (Pepper Spray)
    Psychoactives & Assault
    ARTICLES & WRITINGS #
    DEA's NADDIS System: A Guide for Attorneys, the Courts, and Researchers, by Leonard Pickard Nov
    Police Drug Recognition Methods, by Stephen Pittel
    MEDIA COVERAGE #
    ACLU says War On Drugs has increased racial profiling (AP Story)
    Truck Drivers Billboards Against Police Searches
    EXPERIENCES #
    Phish Tour Summer '98, by Charlie
    False K-9 Threat, by Murple
    Getting To Know Me, by Yoschie
    3 Weeks In Its Reality, by Oliver
    Brief Psychosis, by Budman
    » » » MORE » » »
    OFF-SITE RESOURCES
    SECONDARY RESOURCES #
    Flex Your Rights
    Consenting to a Automobile Search
    INTERACTING WITH POLICE #
    Never Talk to the Police
    ACLU Bust Card
    Busted : The Citizen's Guide to Surviving Police Encounters, by Flex Your Rights
    POLICE ORGANIZATIONS #
    Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP)
    Scottish DEA
    PRISON ISSUES #
    Prison Legal News
    Prison Activist Resource Center
    Families Against Mandatory Minimums
    Institute of Prison Law
    National Institute of Corrections
    International Center for Prison Studies
    DRUG WAR #
    FBI Eases Rules on Past Drug Use for Hiring, Aug 7 2007, Washington Post
    Damage Done: The Drug War Odyssey, a documentary by Connie Littlefield, 2006
    Rex Curry's Drug Sniffing Dogs
    Drug War Deaths
    ARTICLES & WRITINGS #
    A Workable Approach to Search and Seizure, CA Narcotics Officers' Assoc., archived by OC CopWatch
    MEDIA COVERAGE #
    Ex-Drug Officer Shows Users How to Avoid Arrest, Oct 31 2007, NPR
    OTHER RESOURCES #
    Problem-Oriented Guides for Police Series: Rave Parties, US DOJ
    How to Excercise Your Legal Rights (High Times)
    Your Rights (NORML)
    Effective Search and Seizure
    Who Can Give Police Permission to Search Your Home?
    Understanding Search and Seizure Law
    Search and Seizure: A Guide...
    Pot Busts at Borders (NORML)
    Border Searches: Another Step Over the 4th Amendment Line
    Information on Cannabis Busts (PotBust.com)
    National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers


    To assert in any case that a man must be absolutely
    cut off from society because he is absolutely evil
    amounts to saying that society is absolutely good,
    and no-one in his right mind will believe this today.
    --- Albert Camus (1913-1960)
    Last edited by project tillogic; 01-01-2016 at 11:15 PM.

  15. #90

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    with this knowledge ive stayed out of trouble my entire life and ive always done way more drugs thatn the average person they were just ever able to caughht me the only way you can get caught up is if you fucking slip if you know what i learned

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