t=0, t=0+e, t=0+2e, ...
It is all about awareness of different slices of time. Everything is still at each instant. Awareness just moves from one slice of time to another. Non-living beings are things that are without this sense of awareness. Living beings usually can only sense one slice of time at a time. Simultaneous awareness of more than one slice of time would cause terrible confusion from which the only way out is stopping the awareness as it becomes too overwhelming to deal with.
What if you don't resort to the state where you run away from awareness? What if you are prepared; armed with the knowledge that reason, harmony and clarity will be lost once you become aware of more than one instances of time. Maybe, you can be prepared to see that which only few have seen.
Dreams are an indicator of the potential of simultaneous awareness. They are but a leap towards the aspect of multiple sensations of time. But, dreams are often forgotten. They are termed as unreal because the awareness is inconsistent with the state of slice of time that a human is more readily aware of. What if dreams were awareness of a state of a different slice of time. Would you then call them real?
What is real? Only the awareness of states that make sense together? Only those that
are consistent with each other?
Is it that, missing the finer slices of time that would induce a sense of consistency of the "unreal" dreams, is sufficient to call an instance of time as unreal?
The slices of time are pre-determined and free will is just an illusion. You are only here to sense the instances of time, not to change the state of the slice of time. But then, it is much difficult to convince a man who is blinded by the illusion of freewill, that there is no reason, no greater purpose and no significant meaning. The sense of nothingness is too hard to endure. For we all have been brought up with ideals, morals and ethics. That there is a greater purpose that we are supposed to serve.
The only thing there is to learn, is perhaps, that there is nothing to learn.
Monday, April 26, 2010
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