We’re not seeing something
The fact that we’re not seeing something may simply mean that we’re not seeing, not that it does not happen.
:- Doug.
The fact that we’re not seeing something may simply mean that we’re not seeing, not that it does not happen.
:- Doug.
Time is relative in age. Visits to years ago may take seconds in others’ clock time and months in subjective time.
:- Doug.
Time is relative in age. Visits to years ago may take seconds in others’ clock time and months in subjective time.
:- Doug.
Our spatial aspect makes us appear as objects with mass and our time aspect as processes involving equivalent energy. Our matter and activity cannot be separated: they are facets of the same reality. This is equally true of old-old people.
:- Doug.
The further we advance into persons the more activity (conversation) among them we discover. The closer we look the more restless and dynamic the picture. People cannot be separated from their correlations. The more we confine them (such as in shrinking brains in dementia, or shrinking worlds as in nursing homes) the more restless they become.
:- Doug.