Tuesday, April 10, 2007

What intangible thing has an inerrant (or invariable - for Lesbo and Rosene) scale of measure?

I vote no.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I vote poop.

But I do vote yes for hanging out with you on Friday night!

I had fun at your apartment-warming. But it wasn't too warm outside.

The end.

C-4 said...

I still say words. Forget language. Nouns: Person, place, thing or idea. Every language has them. The concept of one thought, as it is portrayed in speech. A word is a unit.

Anonymous said...

I think she means physical unit c-4. I am gonna refer to this post in my next post. But I am going to elaborate on your actual meaning instead of leaving it all cryptic. Is that cool?

jOY said...

yes, elaborate as you wish. physical yet intangible...

"A unit of measurement is a standardised quantity of a physical property" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Units_of_measurement

I don't care about standardised. I'm thinking absolute.

"A numerical value for a perception is, directly or indirectly, the expected response of a group of observers when perceiving the specified physical event."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intensive_and_extensive_properties

just throwing stuff out there. you can take it or shove it right back.

C-4 said...

You cannot have a physical unit for a non physical thing. Physical things have physical units and metaphysical things have metaphysical units. I just said nothing.

jOY said...

all thoughts. no words. I just went in a spiral.