So im not sure how to explain this...but today i got high with a buddy, and after a few minutes of throwing a frissbee on the beach, everything turned dark, like when you turn the brightness or contrast down on a pc screen? But its not like it was darker, it was just a darker shade of normal...i cant really explain, but it was as if there was darkness behid the sky, behind every molecule...it was very eerie, but so so cool. Anyone else ever experienced this?
The dark must exist to support the light, there is no light without the dark to hold it up - the purpose of the negative is to set the stage for the positive - if there's no stage, thus no positive without the negative to support it
Yea it happens to me sometimes...like everything gets a reddish tint to it...don't know what it means and it always goes away so i don't really worry about it too much.
I assume that you are talking about dark=yin and light=yang. Which is the traditional association But if you consider the Big Bang, there was energy at the beginning with no room for dark. As the universe expanded there was more space and the energy could put forth new forms of itself. If we look at energy as light and dark as the new space that the expanding universe creates, it makes sence that yang="the creative"=light and yin="the receptive"=dark.
so your saying that the darkness is like a canvass, if so, then the darkness can be without light, but the light cannot be without darkness?
If you could see dark matter, say astronomers, most galaxies, including our own Milky Way, would appear 10 times larger than they do in telescopes. All the familiar inhabitants of the cosmos stars, galaxies, planets, and clouds of gas and dust are just a small fraction of whats out there. And yet, for something so ubiquitous, dark matter has proved incredibly elusive. Here on Earth, dark matter could be passing by us or perhaps, through us but we dont notice. In part thats because dark matter rarely, if ever, interacts with normal matter We never get clouds in the UK. Its the dark matter.