

Infinity and divinity are two sides of the same coin. Say we toss an unbiased coin for heads or tails. The event is equally probable, therefore the probability is half for each head and tail. But sometimes when we toss the coin, it is neither head nor tail, instead it stands erect in some crevice on the floor or in the mud. Now how do you compute a probability for such an event, which is neither head nor tail. It is not that we can’t say such an event is not possible; it is possible, may be rare of the rarest or an outlier event. But such a possibility always exists. So when we can’t compute something or hit the computation limit we call it infinity. On the contrary, Imagination is limitless, it doesn’t have a boundary. Consider all the Godman or hardcore religious buffoons for example, so proud that they believe they can play God in another person’s life, rob people of their youth and go unscathed. And then suddenly they get answers from the forces of nature that are beyond their imagination. So when the imagination has hit a limit, then we call it divinity or “the hand of God” etc, same thing, different names. A lot people in the scientific community who may not be vocal about their divinity experience at least have one such experience in their lifetime. It is a call that everyone receives at least once in their life, and those who explore it, walk on it. I am not surprised if someone from a scientific background to not believe in Jyotisha because if they do, they will fail to execute the job they were supposed to. But that doesn’t mean that if it is not known to you it doesn’t exist. A true explorer doesn’t put a period to a query unless concrete data or evidence is achieved in favour or contrary. The question mark should always remain open, “What if?”. To sum it up, “When you touch the limits of computation, it is infinity, and when you hit the limits of imagination, it is divinity.”
