Originally posted by : Dr. MPS RAMANI Ph.D.[Tech] |
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In 10 days only two have responded. One has responded in detail and the other has supported. My conclusion would be that based on the information furnished the settlement can be reversed unless with passage of time it has stage of irreversibility.To state in the words of Jigyasu nothing is permanent, but past is permanent. |
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@ Dr. M.P.S. Ramani,
Probably you are in a sheer misunderstanding, if you think past IS permanent. you may like to apply your mind appropriately and would realise that the 'past" denotes "WAS" there but not "IS." available in the present scenario, as the past is merely a compilation or collection of all the events that have already vanished or perished, being not permanent in nature.
So, "WAS", which has already vanished, can never be "IS", as has already passed away with the past.
FURTHER, may be outwittingly, you have endorsed my views, "undergoing a set process" in the first part of your opinion, where you said, "the settlement CAN BE REVERSED unless with passage of time it has stage of irreversibility."
About irreversability, that also depends on consensual and mutual understanding of the parties cocerned or, if disputed, on the way the things are presented through some very smart lawyers before the court.
So, nothing is irreversible or impossible. If you read the word "impossible" by splitting it as "I M Possible" that itself speaks that " I AM POSSIBLE."
So, all depends upon the nature of efforts a person does.