Talk:Boundary

Emotional Boundaries

''A boundary can also be a type of personal defence mechanism. People put up emotional boundaries to prevent them from disapointment, pain or suffering due to another persons actions.'' --172.188.160.142 16:54, 13 March 2007 (UTC)Charlie Baker

State Boundaries
What about state or country boundaries? I'm not sure how and if they fit into any of these definitions. Also, if there is another name by which these types of divisions (there's another name right there :)) are made, I believe, as common speak at least in the US, that a page on boundaries between countries and other municipalities should both exist and link to this page. panth0r (talk) 03:21, 29 October 2008 (UTC)

boundary - limit (0<1>0)
The boundary is not the same as the limit. By limiting magnitude of a medium limit defines details of that medium but in itself it is not the medium, which it limits. Limit is the place where observer is conscious of his self and of the nonexistence of any other medium apart from the medium of the limit, which is the Nothingness. The limit is static and it is defined from the side of the observed medium. The rest of the medium of the limit is undefined. Boundary, on the other hand, is a magnitude of some static medium limited at two opposing sides or ends and it separates two media or two parts of one medium. Limit is one part of the duality with the medium, which it limits, while the boundary forms trinity with the two limits and it can have any plurality and any organization of its parts. The simplest boundary is a unit ‘1’, acting as the observer and the unit of measurement. The trinity of the two limits ‘0’ and the perfect observer ‘1’ remains static and therefore eternal. The observer ‘1’ does not change even though, on the inside, he consists of parts. To observe his ‘self’ he has to move consciousness from the first limit ‘0’ to the second limit ‘0’. To do this he has to cross the boundary between the two limits. The change of position of the observer’s consciousness occurs in the Nothingness and therefore it is not observed so that the trinity remains static. The unit ‘1’, acting as the observer, consists internally of reflection of the 2 units on the outside. This means that the static unit ‘1’ consists of 4 parts, 2 internally and 2 externally. With each next observation (n+1) plurality of the limits of Nothingness of the static unit ‘1’ changes as 2 to power (n+1), where (0<n<oo) and the imperfect observers, as parts of the perfect observer, change to (1/2) to power (n+1). Internal dynamism of the boundary ‘1’ manifests itself as time while the static state of ‘1’ is space. Different observers see different space times. KK  (81.151.92.232 (talk) 20:24, 2 May 2013 (UTC)

boundaries
what are boundaries 41.116.48.188 (talk) 07:53, 29 March 2022 (UTC)