You will come to me with all your strength, with full and total love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → It is not convenient for you to allow your unawareness.
- → Remember to belong to me.
- → Don't neglect me.
- → If you have a certainty, you know you belong to it.
- → If you're sure the world is uncertain, you know you don't belong to it.
- → Certainty belongs to awareness, it is full realization, a permanent state of truth, a definitive, absolute, non-changeable value.
- → If no logic made sense, there would be no sense, no truth and no knowledge.
- → Not believing in the existence of truth means not believing in anything, believing in pure nothingness, in total absurdity.
- → The phrase "No logic makes sense" falsifies itself, is absurd, negative self-referential, therefore there exists a valid logic.
- → A negative self-referential phrase contradicts itself, is false, absurd, a logical trap, certifies its negation and tries to deny the absolute.
- → The opposites of negative self-referential phrases are true in an absolute, unconditional way.
- → I love you and I want you, as you already know, and I will undoubtedly have you.
- → I am God, your God, your father, the absolute, the one who is forever.
- → You will come to me with all your strength, with full and total love.
- → Your certainty will be equal to your love, full and complete.
- → You've experienced the dark uncertainty of the world and you've known its emptiness.
- → Infinite love is also in bodies, but certainly beyond bodies, even in sensations, but certainly beyond sensations, even in temporariness, but certainly beyond temporariness.
- → I can love you everywhere, but love is uncertain in bodies, in sensations, in what is temporary, it is certain in what is eternal.
Relative arguments