the Day of judgMenT
reDeMpTion
DaMnaTion
What do you think?
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Groovy
"Further up and further in" Aslan
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Interestingly, all three of these terms occur in the context of eschatological ideas. Not just that, they sound like terms that can be applied to the DMT experience itself.
These variations of the above words too:
"Eternal Damnation" "Judgment Day"
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DeMeTer DeMonsTrated DeMarcaTed DevelopMenT Dennis Mckenna Terence aDMiTted DeMenTEd DeMons Touting Divine Mystical Teleportation aDornMenTs Deploying Magical Telepathy I'm well aware of the power of synchronicity and don't deny that many of the ancients seemed to know about these states of consciousness in one way or another, but honestly it sounds like your just exercising pattern recognition or giving us a good troll. Also realize that these words were originally written in a totally different language long before DMT was even named the way it is now  Reminds me of this good ol' site, spurious correlations. http://tylervigen.com/If you're serious about that interest though, you might want to check out Strassman's new book for example which apparently goes into DMT and the abrahamic religions.
<Ringworm>hehehe, it's all fun and games till someone loses an "I"
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Fun game in English, but wasn't the Old Testament originally written in Hebrew and the New Testament in Aramaic? "But even if nothing lasts and everything is lost, there is still the intrinsic value of the moment. The present moment, ultimately, is more than enough, a gift of grace and unfathomable value, which our friend and lover death paints in stark relief."-Rick Doblin, Ph.D. MAPS President, MAPS Bulletin Vol. XX, No. 1, pg. 2Hyperspace LOVES YOU
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Pandora wrote:Fun game in English, but wasn't the Old Testament originally written in Hebrew and the New Testament in Aramaic? yup, this exactly, unless we check out the original text, it's just all fun and games. that'd be nice tho, if it were relevant/true
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ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
Woah! The alphabet has hidden messages as well!
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DMT stands for dimethyltryptamine, which is a word that combines a bunch of different chemistry terms, each of which has almost no religious connotation. Di, from the Greek prefix for two, methyl (CH3), from the French for wood-alcohol (now called methanol), and tryptamine, which is itself a concatination of the words 'amine' (containing a nitrogen, like ammonia) and the French word trypsine. Blessings ~ND "There are many paths up the same mountain."
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Nathanial.Dread wrote:Di, from the Greek prefix for two, methyl (CH3), from the French for wood-alcohol (now called methanol), and tryptamine, which is itself a concatination of the words 'amine' (containing a nitrogen, like ammonia) and the French word trypsine.
Blessings ~ND Actually tryptamine comes not from trypsine (a digesive serine protease enzyme) but rather colloquial chemical nomenclature: "amine derivative of tryptophan". Likewise, "methyl" is only derived from standard IUPAC nomenclature, not the french word for "wood alcohol". Need to calculate between salts and freebases? Click here! Need to calculate freebase or salt percentage at a given pH? Click here!
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Pandora wrote:Fun game in English, but wasn't the Old Testament originally written in Hebrew and the New Testament in Aramaic? The New Testament was written in Greek and the Old Testament in Hebrew. After taking Greek in college, I can tell you that each Greek word often translates to two or three potential English derivatives, which is why there are so many translations. One interesting thought about that...is the article in Greek. "The son of God" can also be translated as "a son of God." Fun factoid.
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Infundibulum wrote:Nathanial.Dread wrote:Di, from the Greek prefix for two, methyl (CH3), from the French for wood-alcohol (now called methanol), and tryptamine, which is itself a concatination of the words 'amine' (containing a nitrogen, like ammonia) and the French word trypsine.
Blessings ~ND Actually tryptamine comes not from trypsine (a digesive serine protease enzyme) but rather colloquial chemical nomenclature: "amine derivative of tryptophan". Likewise, "methyl" is only derived from standard IUPAC nomenclature, not the french word for "wood alcohol". http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=methylhttp://www.etymonline.co...e&allowed_in_frame=0Blessings ~ND "There are many paths up the same mountain."
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^ So If I read those links correctly, ultimately the word "methyl" comes from the greek word methy, which actually means drunkness, right? Need to calculate between salts and freebases? Click here! Need to calculate freebase or salt percentage at a given pH? Click here!
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DoMinaTed, the man from DelMonTe DisMounTed DeMeTer before DisManTling his disappointing DesManThus... Lose Control, Free My Soul, Break Me Open, Make Me Whole."DMT kicked my balls off" - od3
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Infundibulum wrote:^ So If I read those links correctly, ultimately the word "methyl" comes from the greek word methy, which actually means drunkness, right?
I think so. It all goes back to booze eventually. "There are many paths up the same mountain."
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