Milton Platt
Well-Known Member
so do we observe the image of anything, or the actions of a thing in theory? in reality?
we observe the action of a thing. we don't observe the form of a thing because things can evolve in form.
god is a verb. languages evolve too
Genesis Chapter 1 (KJV)
And they had a king over them, which is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath his name Apollyon.
Technically, we only see the image formed in the brain from photons bouncing off of the object in question.
But we can sidestep that for now.
Why does the potential for evolution prevent one from seeing a thing (or object, more correctly)? How are you using the term evolution in this case? It must be a non-standard useage.
Suppose for the sake of the argument that virtually everything is evolving or changing at a continual rate around us. We would still observe the thing as it is at the moment of observation. When we observed it later, we would see the evolved version. But in each instance, we observed the thing.
Can you be more clear on what you mean? You have yet to lay out any argument for discussion. Do you have a point, and can you support it coherently?
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