Partly, yes. But only here there is no mysticism. Simply, in fact, a person is not able to verify the information that he receives, moreover, some information is painful for him (causes unpleasant emotions), and some is not (many choose a suitable – not traumatic-explanation). So, for example, mothers of drug addicts sometimes do not notice until the last moment that something is happening to the child. Or people who are informed that they have HIV start thinking that this is a mistake or that HIV is fiction…So this is more or less objective information, and when you ask a person about his opinion, then, in general, it does not matter whether he tells the truth or lies, you decide for yourself whether to trust him or not. People with good intuition are more likely to be right. In general, we live in an illusion that we create for ourselves.
The answers to our questions are hidden in the Universal Responder. But there's a problem. The person who set it accidentally wrote a condition – the respondent only answers correctly asked questions. And since, in order to correctly formulate a question, you need to already know the answer to it, knowledgeable people no longer fly to it-so, only all sorts of underdeveloped suckers. (see R. Sheckley)
Partly, yes. But only here there is no mysticism. Simply, in fact, a person is not able to verify the information that he receives, moreover, some information is painful for him (causes unpleasant emotions), and some is not (many choose a suitable – not traumatic-explanation). So, for example, mothers of drug addicts sometimes do not notice until the last moment that something is happening to the child. Or people who are informed that they have HIV start thinking that this is a mistake or that HIV is fiction…So this is more or less objective information, and when you ask a person about his opinion, then, in general, it does not matter whether he tells the truth or lies, you decide for yourself whether to trust him or not. People with good intuition are more likely to be right. In general, we live in an illusion that we create for ourselves.
The answers to our questions are hidden in the Universal Responder. But there's a problem. The person who set it accidentally wrote a condition – the respondent only answers correctly asked questions. And since, in order to correctly formulate a question, you need to already know the answer to it, knowledgeable people no longer fly to it-so, only all sorts of underdeveloped suckers. (see R. Sheckley)