Some other ways of looking at this possibility:
1. Is there a phenomenology of NON (objective) existence by which
"being", itself, has an existent nature?
2. Is there a charicteristic "place" such that the dimensionality of
"thingness" might follow (something like) this order of manifestation;
*place*, reflexivity, redundency, continuance, time, energy, extension
(height, width), mass.
3. Is there a feminine imperitive to passively await the positive
arrival of non-being (like there is a masculine imperitve to actively
persue self-negation... this second is called the oedipal imperitive
which I might explain as the necessity to establish objectivity-- or an
existent nature-- through the dis-continuance of ontological "being";
that is, denial of self and projection onto "other" in a way that one
becomes existently "perminent" in an objective fashion.)?
4. Is there a psychological developmental quality "object *im*
permanence" (like "object permanence" establishes that a thing still
exists when a baby can no longer see it... is there a quality by which
one might similarly conceptualize that a thing which does not exist
continues to have non-existence)?
I think the understanding of this proposed state will explain "thantos"
as an active force which must be balanced through a quality "will" (thus
defined as the natural passion which "fills" the chance ordering of
chaos-- a direct result of the complexification of chaos by the
phenomenology of nothingness).
Brett Lane Robertson
Indiana, USA
www.window.to/mindrec
BIO: http://members.theglobe.com/bretthay
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