Mike Corey
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
the square sound of the three fourths, the sesquialterate to the sesquitertiate.
Or then you could even take something to the Pentagon.
And just once you build the Pentagon, and Kepler is very clear, you can't just build a Pentagon.
You have to discover how you built that Pentagon.
You have to read Luca Pacioli like he did.
And you have to then figure out, okay, what is the square root of five over one?
And then when you build it, you discover, okay, well,
I now know it, I've worked on the squares, I've looked at the, I've actually done the geometry and now I can hear the sound of the, it'll make more sense, it'll be more meaningful when I actually build that pentagon around that circle and then I hear the three-fifths to the two-fifths or the four-fifths to the one-fifth, you know?
Yeah, I mean, I think that there's certain ways of thinking that are forbidden, that there's certain... It's more important...
I think it's really more important how you think than what you think about anything.
So it's how you think about everything that you can be wrong about a lot of the elements, but it's the potency of, is your method a potent method?
Because Plato was wrong about a lot of the elements, the details.
But the method was really, really important.
and you'll find that when you read the original writings, this goes back to when I was working with the LaRouche organization for a number of years and we were reading, that was the greatest thing about this old man LaRouche who passed away in 2019, is he did have a good impulse to try to encourage, especially the younger members, to go on a curriculum, like be disciplined in the mind, read the writings of people who seem to have made discoveries, and then try to think about what their mind is doing as they wrote their own words out
to showcase how they are hypothesizing, or in Kepler's case, he's really, really gracious, because he's telling you how he's even falsely, like how his bad hypothesis occurred so that you don't take for granted how much work it took for years to finally generate that good,
Eureka, like that potent hypothesis.
And that's what Plato also does in a lot of his dialogues.
He's taking you through a lot of the false hypotheses, but he's doing it as a, he's not trying to be liked.
He knows it's going to piss people off.
Yeah.