the stickky one November 23, 2012 November 23, 2012 You may have something here, Bluesleeve. The dark age and the bloody inquisitions that the Christians brought about with them, made pagans and witches scarce, along with their knowledge. This is probably why we think that the process to create a tulpa originated from the Tibetan monks who have no need to hide their techniques from any blood stained inquisitors. Also the definition of a demon back then was a being that has never existed in this world. They plagued folks who nowadays would be considered to be sick mentally...sound familiar? I think we should all be thankful that the pope no longer acts like a power hungry mob boss.
glitchthe3rd November 23, 2012 November 23, 2012 >tfw I see this ancient topic and am reminded of Final Fantasy XIII for some reason "Science isn't about why, science is about why not?" -Cave Johnson Tulpae: Luna, Elise, Naomi My progress report
Queen Chrysalis November 23, 2012 November 23, 2012 History is next to impossible to destroy. It is a paradigm shift, but it is not a return to nature, much the opposite. http://tulpa.info/forums/Thread-Show-Your-Chrysalove Avatar by ~InsomniacOvrLrd.
Koji November 24, 2012 November 24, 2012 >dat necro and yeah, seems pretty viable. http://tulpa.info/forums/Thread-Koji-and-Catelyn-Of-Deserts-and-Snowmen
qszaw November 29, 2012 November 29, 2012 If Bicameralism is true, what we're doing isn't a "return to nature", rather, it is progress. Before, the chambers of thought were divided; one was a master, the other a slave. Now, we're learning to work as equals. This is progress.
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