delusion won't help you.... it only buffers you from reality.
Hmm. Hmmm have u ever heard that words do not hurt as long as u won't take them seriously ... Especially when u go out to meet women n if u took seriously every single insult u would end up getting inoto many fights or would go home n cry into yr pillow because some1 with a very little IQ CALLED U ..... 😉
To be honest I was quite drunk when I wrote that post. I can't really remember my reasoning behind it but it's in there somewhere. Something to do with the Omega Number from The Never Ending Days of Being Dead. I'll get back to you when I can face such deep thinking but for now it's the gym and then free beer and sandwiches in town, so if you'll excuse me gentlemen...
Also, Hammertime, I know plenty about quantum theory. I went through a phase of devouring material on the subject and as is the case with everyone else who tries to understand it, came out stumped.
It's just advice, fellas. Do whatever the FUCK you wanna do
OK I'm bored and thought I would join in the pointless navel gazing ...
A "theory of everything" with respect to the physical universe is entirely feasible. Its not necessary or indeed especially useful for such a theory to have to encompass abstractions such as ideas or theories themselves. Ideas are abstract emergent properties of physical matter that is organised in a certain way (i.e. our neurons) and those organisational pattern are not uniquely dependent on exact physical properties of the individual particles that form the informational patterns.
Nor do I see any compelling reason as to why such a theory needs to be infinitely complex. Anyway please desist with this infinity shit - it will drive you mad, as it has done some famous mathematicians.
WRT relativity vs quantum mechanics, clearly there is some unifying framework that connects them since for example we cannot use quantum effects to breach relativity at the macro level e.g. using them to transfer information faster than light. Its just that we cannot for whatever reason perceive it, most likely because our sensory apparatus (both natural and constructed) only exists in some subset of the dimensions that make up the complete system.