YmirGF
Bodhisattva in Recovery
Eternity...
I understand precisely what you mean, but your sentence construction asserts that "the Creator" is actually a part of "this world". Now I don't especially dispute that, however I would like to say that this so-called "Creator" is a lot closer to home than most people suspect. I would also assert that ALL people are far more aware of "the creator", in fact, they are intimately aware of this "creator" with every breath they breathe and every thought they think, however they are not used to thinking about the "creator" in the proper context. I'm sure you understand.Every thing in this world has an end except the Creator who control the properties of the world.
I cannot image why a "god" would "give" us something once again that "he" already gave us so "long ago" that we no longer recall the "giving".God will give us the Eternity property..
---------------
A wise man once said, "It takes a long time to understand the nature of time." It is a sentiment that I wholeheartedly agree with. Our perception of what we call time is a creation of the physical senses and results from how our brain assembles data. The individual continually alters their sensation of time through the lens of their conscious focus. In this way, time is more like an iris that dilates and contracts depending on how much focus is applied.
In moments of intense focus, our perception of time slows down. We become so absorbed in any given task that we simply become unaware of how much "time" has passed. Likewise we will often sense that "time is dragging" and this is usually when we would rather be doing something else and our focus is hard to maintain.
In my view, there is ONLY now and "past" is simply one way we view accumulated data. The "future" is simply an array of relative probabilities that we have not yet chosen to enter our experience. Time, in one sense, is relative to the viewpoint taken and is more like a series of intensities rather than a "tick, tick, tick" ordered progression. Yes, "time" can be measured with arbitrary units however that sense of time is not as accurate as we would like to think. Perhaps a better way of saying it is that there may be different kinds of time, perhaps "real" time and chronological time for starters.
Lets go back to s2a's statement that when we look up into the sky, we are looking into the past. That is most certainly correct as it takes "time" for our senses to accumulate the data so that our minds can make sense of the data. The thing is that the photons we are looking at are still within their own now. If a photon could sit down and have a quick chat on its way by, it would probably say that it was now when asked what time it was. As Uncle Albert outlined, time is relative to the observer.
I guess my last point is that so-called "eternity" exists within the moment point and our perception of this quality occurs when we learn to slow down the winds of our minds (our data processing centre) and bask in that moment point. In some ways, it is like becoming a surfer riding the crest of a wave, moving in sync to the flow of the wave. Not a bad feat for a mere particle of consciousness. If the individual manages to pull that one off they would agree that they arent in Kansas anymore.
Oh heck, I could be wrong, but if anyone sees holes in this, feel free to nuke me. I'm a big boy, I can take it.
Come along Toto, time for breakfast. :flirt: