Perfection
The Great Head.
If you know something, it's knowledge. Knowledge also has to be true, but just thinking you know something doesn't mean it's true.
Let me be a smart arse as well:What is the difference between what I observe and what people thousands of years ago observe?
The input is the same, them processing (reason) is different.
Just be glad I didn't address sun-consciousness & earth-consciousness. Then you'd see how big of a smart arse (correct spelling) I can be.
Actually tea, in this working class context, means the meal I eat at tea-time, which is about 6:30 pm.I always suspected you drink tea, but now I know for sure.
Let me be a smart arse as well:
With your eyes you can observe movement of the sun on the sky but you cant observe the movement of the earth. Judging from this perspective (of senses) sun moves around the earth.
Later (in evolution of man) with scientifical reason you can calculate distances and positions of cosmic objects and deduce that there is movement of earth around sun. So this is the truth for the developed reason even though the appearance for the senses remains still the same. And of course since reason is superior to senses it becomes accepted truth for all reasoning man.
So you see. Its really simple.
Now about the third part. We have observed matter produce life/senses and mind/reason on this planet. We conclude that through process which we call evolution consciousness come into being from matter. Some may argue that consciousness is present in matter in seed form and is slowly manifested through aeons of time. If this is proven true and also in case evolution has not altogether stopped by some miracle then new pov on cosmic existence may be taken in the future and it could also mean that reasoning intelect is not the highest manifestation/formula of consciousness just like the senses and sensual mind in animals isnt. Then naturaly we will have to revise our understanding of the universe.
I asked a simple question. If you need all that text to avoid it, that's all the answers I need.
And it seems to agree with me.The answer is there...
So now I'm confused.the appearance for the senses remains still the same
Your senses tell you the sun is moving through the sky. The conclusion that it therefore must revolve around the Earth is reasoning. You agree with that, since you realise you had to put the word: "judging" into your statement.Judging from this perspective (of senses) sun moves around the earth
To the senses it is always true that the sun moves round the earth; this is false to the reason
Well if I actually did that I would be pretty famous(or dead) and I probably would have no time to discuss this with you on internetz.... thats also context btwIf you flew out to above the solar system and observed the sun and the earth and the other planets, your senses would tell you that the earth orbits the sun.
It appears to our senses to not be so from certain points of view, such as by observing this from the surface of the orbiting body itself, Earth.
That's just how context works.
If you flew out to above the solar system and observed the sun and the earth and the other planets, your senses would tell you that the earth orbits the sun.
It appears to our senses to not be so from certain points of view, such as by observing this from the surface of the orbiting body itself, Earth.
That's just how context works.
The Sun is moving towards Lambda Herculis at 20 kilometers per second or 12 miles per second.
Not to be too contrarian, but I don't think that you can sense that the planets orbit the sun even from an outside the system view.
It would also seem to have to agree with the notion that the solar system is fixed in space, which I don't think modern science holds either.
But is it the senses, or sensory input that tells us that, or the interpretation of it by the brain? The senses simply convey an image to the brain, the interpretation happens separately from them.If you flew out to above the solar system and observed the sun and the earth and the other planets, your senses would tell you that the earth orbits the sun.
It appears to our senses to not be so from certain points of view, such as by observing this from the surface of the orbiting body itself, Earth.
That's just how context works.
You would be able to easily deduce the gravitational centre of the solar system I think, just by looking at it. You're right that you actually wouldn't see the planets move, unless you sat there for weeks and took photos and compared them.
Technically nothing can be fixed in space. But yeah, it wouldn't be easy to stay "fixed" right above the solar system, directly "above" it. The gravitational pull of the sun would start pulling you in. You'd have to be constantly burning up fuel, just to see that the Earth orbits the sun, and sit there wondering why you've found yourself in such an involved hypothetical situation.
does anyone know if our solar system rotates in the same direction the sun goes around the galactic center?
I assume it would, but is it possible solar systems dont all do the same?
I am pretty sure you are right. In fact both of them are just using me.Don't be a fool, your cat is just using you.
I'd be more interested how you define observation if you claim I leave out experience when I talk about observation.
People who capitalise Truth annoy me to no end.
And I see you limit observation to the limits of our senses when we have all kinds of nifty devices to aid us in observing stuff.
I fully recognized our ability to use technology to enhance our observation. I think you just missed it.Birdjaguar said:Knowledge and observation can go together well, but you have left out experience as a source of truth and maybe knowledge, depending upon how you define knowledge. Why would you want to limit the path to discovering Truth to our ability to manipulate the electromagnetic spectrum?
I like to think about a hierarchy of what is true and is value in the scheme of things.What is a T Truth and how do you know it is T True?
What a load of bollocks.I am sorry to annoy you, but using no caps/caps to differentiate between the lesser truths that science discovers and the greater Truths of religion and theology seems helpful to any discussion.![]()