I suppose I would ask if this interaction is one-way. That is, is there any way we can be empirically aware of this interaction?
Dear
Beaudreaux,
My short answer to your question would be, that through what so far is acknowledged as empirical, man in general, is not aware of much.
I do not wish to speak off topic, yet ask for a moment to explain myself here, so as to not simply be labelled awkward
J
It is my belief that we are evolutionarily taught to
interpret existence as we do: i.e. through five, well-developed senses, we experience what is, as spatially and chronologically positioned, qualitative matter in 3D. This, we do because so far, it has enabled and benefited - or at least sufficed for - our survival.
We know that for every
sensorial quality, there is a particular
physical composition (e.g. a distinct scent, corresponds to a specific composition).
The fact that different kinds of sensorial qualities are experienced through different senses, tells us, that not all sorts of physical composition are detectable by all five empirical senses (e.g. one hears not compositions of flavour; one sees not compositions of scent, etc.)
To me then, the probability of there existing
many other kinds of physical composition, undetectable by our most common five senses, seems larger than the likelihood of man having evolved to the degree of not being able to evolve any further.
Also; I know I have asked publicly before, but do we really not believe sound-waves to have existed prior to an eardrum?
My personal conclusion
Beaudreaux, is that I am very much
empirically aware of my god, whos composition I detect by a sixth type of sense, which we have no terminology for, because - though neither new, nor even historically uncommon - evolutionarily speaking, it has not been to our advantage to invent one.
Eventually mind, I think this will change and, experiencing existence abstractly may become the next way forward - but that's definitely another thread!
Until next time,
Hermit