Saturday, May 15, 2010

Course 4 on The Globally Distinguishable Vs. The Substringular, Session Nine, Part 1

Where something is depends on what you are trying to pinpoint. Let's say, for instance, that you are trying to find a boat on the ocean. The boat may or may not be moving, at least of its own accord. If you knew the exact latitude and longitude of the ship to the nearest second at a certain instant (the selfsame minute), you would then have a neighborhood with which to look in that might be sufficient enough to help you find the boat. A boat is what we would call an object. An object that is tangible to our world is three-dimensional and moves in three-dimensional space. Any object as we just called it is a phenomenon that is perceived by us as a three-dimensional delineation in the GLOBALLY DISTINGUISHABLE. I term it as such because our direct perceptivities are in a universal encoding that our physical senses can detect or distinguish. Such an encodement of perception gives us completion in our ability to unify actual occurrences and things as an entity that is global. Another way of looking at this is that our general reality as we view it and live in it as a physical entity is the globally distinguishable. The laws of physics that are the most commonly associated with normal, everyday occurrences as we would normally think of them is the condition of reality that is thus termed globally distinguishable. So, based on this, where a person goes is where they are, not only in terms of their whole body, yet, also in terms of every particle that comprises that person -- no only at the outside of the journey, yet during the whole journey. I will continue with the suspense of this session later. Until then, you have a phenomenal day.
Catch you two!
Sincerely,
Sam.

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