“The Deceptive Nature of Memory”
[“The Deceptive Memory”]
-Third edition-
Surely it is everybody’s belief that the
past had once existed. It naturally is everybody’s belief too that the
childhood period that we had once gone through did exist. It sounds as if we
are passing our time sequentially, which consequently makes it sound natural
for us to refer to time that has passed as “the past” and time that will
come as “the future.” As it turns out, however, there is a lot of confusion
about this.
Is it true that at the present what we always
“experience” is actually the past condition of our surroundings? Is
it true that man constantly “finds himself to be in the present” throughout
his lifetime? Is it possible that the assumption that there is a “past” and
a “future” is but a mere result of the human ability to recall those
memories on the previous condition imprinted in his brain?
Could it be that there’s
something about it that we have simply overlooked?
The Concept of Time Simplified
To answer these questions, it is indispensable that we
trace the origin of the concept of time. In ancient times all people
were able to say was that when the sun rose above them or when there was
brightness then that would mean daytime; on the other hand, when darkness
befell them, then that would mean night. Later, when they became more
advanced, for the sake of accuracy in communicating meanings and by means of
a device which they themselves invented, brightness or day was divided into
12, and so was darkness or night. Although such an initiative did not, it is
believed, originate from some place at the equator, they somehow still
managed to divide the day and the night equally into twelve hours.
In conformity with the further improvements they achieved
in communications, they then divided the hour into sixty minutes, and the
minute into sixty seconds. It was since then that we have come to know such
terms as hours, minutes and seconds, and even one-hundredth of a second.
From the revolution of the moon around the earth and the earth around the
sun we have such things as months and years. Apart from these units of time
(second, minute, hour, day, month, year, century), we also have such adverbs
of time as “the past” to refer to any period of time that we have passed,
“the present” to the period of time we are undergoing, and “the future” to
any period of time that is to come. Our growth from being an infant to
becoming an adult further confirms that we have always been undergoing a
condition in terms of time, which leads us to acknowledge that such things
as the “past,” “present,” and “future” do exist. By implication, therefore,
the “past,” the “present,” and the “future” are what we shall inevitably be
experiencing on and on for as long as we live.
What Do We Mean by “To Experience”?
Considering the fact that we are consistently
experiencing movements or changes of condition from time to time, it is
perhaps worthwhile for us to spend some time discussing what we mean by “to
experience” here. A sure and easy way to get a clearer explanation about the
meaning of the word is, of course, by looking it up in a dictionary. In the
Random House Webster’s dictionary, for instance, experience as a verb, is
defined as to live through or undergo. The Collins Concise
Dictionary Plus defines it as to be moved by or feel, and the
Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary defines it as to feel. In fact,
there are as many definitions of the word as there are people who think
about it.
But let’s now examine the limitations of the existing
definitions. “To experience” in general involves two things: the condition
of our external environment and that of our bodies. Because we have the five
senses, we are certainly able to receive the various external stimuli, which
are then instantly passed on to the brain so that we become aware of the
presence of something coming from outside of our bodies. The phrase “to
experience” is generally associated with our senses, particularly our sense
of sight. As it turns out, not all external matter is felt by our senses.
There are things that we are just unable to monitor, such as the
electromagnetic waves, certain kinds of rays, magnetic fields, and certain
pitches of sounds, etc. Apart from these, the failure to feel the presence
of external matter can also be attributed to certain functional disorders or
abnormalities of the receiving end. Now, what if our bodies receive external
stimuli in a manner as described above: Could we still say that we have
actually been experiencing something, even if we do not feel it? Are we
entitled to say that we had just experienced an operation, despite the fact
that we did not feel it because we were then anesthetized? What about those
lepers, whose affected parts of their bodies are just unable to feel
anything at all, because their nerves have become dysfunctional? Now, what
if we are unable to recall certain memories stored in our brains due to
amnesia or other causes? Are we justified in saying that we have never
experienced such and such a thing? So blurry is the meaning of “to
experience” that to establish an accurate definition of the phrase could be
a really demanding job.
The phrase “to experience” in this article denotes a
state wherein our bodies come into contact with anything external to our
bodies; or a state wherein we are dealing with issues that occur within our
bodies themselves; or a state wherein we are dealing with issues from within
our brains, regardless of whether we feel it or not, whether we are aware of
it or not, and whether we are able to recall it or not.
Let’s now see how this word “to experience” relates to
the anomalies described below.
The Anomalies
1. We always experience the past condition of our
surroundings.
When we look up at the sky, especially at night, the
stars we see in the sky are in their past condition—the lights radiated by
these objects need time to reach our eyes. If, for instance, the light of a
star takes one year to get to our eyes, then the star that we now see is not
what it really is at present, but rather what it was a year ago. The stars
that we see at this very moment could be in their condition of one year ago,
or ten years ago, or perhaps even millions of years ago. In fact, it is also
possible that among these numerous celestial bodies that we see as tangible
objects, some may have either utterly changed, or moved elsewhere, or
completely diminished. Similarly, all those things around us need time to
get to our eyes and further to our brain. An object a meter away from us
needs 1/300,000,000 of a second to get to our eyes. Thus, we can say that
this object that we see is in its condition of 1/300,000,000 of a second
ago. This holds true not only for those external conditions transmitted by
light but also for those transmitted by the air. When, for instance, a gun
two miles away from us is fired, it will only be about eight seconds later
that we will hear the gunshot—not to mention the time that the impression of
the sound takes to reach the brain, which must certainly be also taken into
account no matter how short it can be. Similar is the case with the
feelings captured by the skin, the various compounds tasted by the tongue,
or the various molecules that enter our nostrils. All these take time to
reach the brain, don’t they? Viewed in the sense of experience as defined
above, it could, therefore, be said that we are always belated in our
knowledge of the external conditions, though this could be only as short as
1/3.000.000.000 of a second. However, since different people have different
body conditions, the rate of this belatedness rightly varies from
person to person. Other factors that are also determinative of this rate of
belatedness are our locality and the medium being used in the delivery of
the external stimuli. As such, whatever our definition of the word
“experience” is, we can still say for certain that at present human beings
are always experiencing “the past of everything around them.” It is as if we
were experiencing/undergoing different periods of time, or a number of
pasts and present, simultaneously. Apparently, compared with the
other senses, our eyes are the ones that play a greater role here. This
means that what we see around us at present is not the present state of
things, which makes it reasonable for us to say that those things around us
are but mere illusions. If according to the physicist these are just common
natural phenomena, where then does this term “to experience” fit in? Doesn’t
one of the definitions above imply that a man is said to be experiencing
something when his eyes receive stimuli from some external condition? And
that external condition is the image of the stars several years ago which we
receive only at the present time.
Why are we able to see the “past” of the various
celestial objects and also of our surroundings? Could it be that the word
“past” has all this time been misinterpreted and misused?
2. Man feels that he always exists at “the
present.”
It is said that because we are here as a form of
“existence,” we ourselves must, therefore, be able to feel our very
existence. Is it not a fact that even at this very moment we feel that we
exist? This is what we precisely mean when we say that we have “the feeling
of existence.” Please note that the “feeling of existence” discussed here is
by no means the same as those feelings produced by our senses or emotional
feelings. A look at only one simple movement that man normally makes in his
daily life could perhaps provide the reader with a clearer picture of the
whole idea. Imagine that at this very moment our arms are at rest, hanging
down by our sides. Now, the instant we raise
our arms, what could possibly be said of them
would be that seconds ago they were hanging down by our sides. Why is
it that in either situation, arms up or arms down, our feeling of
existence seems to tell us that we are consistently at the “present”? You
can try this, if you like, and then take some time to ponder! Perhaps,
because the time span between arms down and arms up is extremely short you
may come to think that there’s nothing unusual about it and can readily
accept such an explanation. The same thing holds true even for movements
that require a longer time span, perhaps an hour or a day, or a year: You
will always feel that your existence is consistently at the “present.”
It is only because we are constantly experiencing
different conditions, and due to the fact that our external and internal
conditions keep changing, that we feel as if our existence is being subject
to the alternate periods of “time.” We are being carried by the rotation of
the earth, now facing the sun so that we have day, then turning away from
the sun so that we have night, yet still feeling that “we are always at the
present.” Since our childhood we have always felt that we “consistently
exist” at the “present.” Even with the entry of external substances into our
bodies which turns us into adults, we keep feeling that we consistently
exist at the present. To say that childhood is a condition of “the
past” would, therefore, seem to be contradictory to the existing “feeling of
existence.”
It is an irony though that while on the one hand we are
“always belated in our knowledge of the actual condition of our
surroundings,” on the other hand we feel or realize that we “consistently
exist at the present.” It sounds as if we are now being faced with a bigger
question mark on the use of the word “past.”
Concerning “the Past”
Is it possible that we have all this time had a mistaken
assumption of our surroundings? There are numerous issues that could, in one
way or another, instantly lead us to some conclusive judgment. To cite only
a few: When we try to recall our past, the death of someone a year ago, and
events a few hours back, are these not just a present attempt
to retrieve the things stored as a memory? When we throw a ball from points
A to B, for instance, we tend to say that the ball was at point A. Does this
not mean that at the time the ball was at point A, the rays reflected by the
ball left an impression or were recorded in our brains, and that it is this
impression or record that we are trying to retrace at the present?
Even a photograph of the past is no indication of the presence of the past,
because what is considered the past, which is immortalized by the
photograph, is a mere assumption we make at the present. Physically
speaking, the photograph itself is in its present condition, though it may
have by now been discolored, or faded. We feel that we have “a past” only
because the past condition leaves a trace in our brains.
The “Future”
Is it true that what man calls the “future” is but a mere
result of his ability to recall the memories of the previous condition that
is imprinted in his brain? Is it not the common knowledge of all,
particularly those who live within the equatorial regions, that we
experience day and night alternately every day? Obviously, it is the very
fact that after the morning comes the afternoon, and then comes the night,
after which we have the morning again and so on, that has caused these
constantly changing routines to be so strongly recorded as our memory. And
it is this very fact too that makes it very easy for us to recall at any
time the presence of the “sequenced conditions.” The fact that we have quite
often kept saying such words as “later,” “after that,” “tomorrow,” is proof
enough that those conditions are so well preserved in our brains that we
find it very easy to recall them. Thus, it is very natural if we insist that
such things as “the future” or “tomorrow” do exist. As such, it could thus
be said that all those plans for tomorrow are but an imagination
added to the outcome of the recollection of “the presence of tomorrow.”
If, for instance, we say that we are going to New York City tomorrow, what
actually occurs is that an imagination is being created at present of our
going there tomorrow. This is so because our idea that there is “a tomorrow”
has already been recorded in our brain, and we can recall it. However, since
conditions keep changing and we continue to exist, we inevitably pass
the night condition. During the time we are in our night condition, we tend
to condition ourselves for our sleeping condition. Eventually, we arrive at
our morning condition, that is, the time set for us to leave for New York.
This is something that we experience daily in our life. Nevertheless,
because we have the ability to recall the custom of having a tomorrow,
we can at that time imagine what we expect to ensue the next day. Obviously,
all these have been made possible because we are able to recall the memories
that had once been stored in our brain, or we have been able to condition
our selves into a position where we can relate our thoughts to the memories
stored in our brain. In sum it could then be said that all those talks about
“the past” and “the future” have been made possible only because “previous
conditions” have left traces in our brain, which at the time of their
“recollection” has enabled us to feel all “the past” that we had once gone
through, and all “the future” following it.
Denying all the premises proposed above would not only
imply that we are experiencing two different times simultaneously,
i.e. the past and the present, but also contradict our own
feeling of existence that we are constantly living in the present.
The Ancient Men with Their “Past” and Their “Future”
Everything must have its origin. Now, how did those
ancient people originally come to have the idea that such things as “the
past” and “the future” do exist? Long before the invention of the time
scales, the cave men, uncivilized as they were, had already been in
possession of memory. It is possible that in those days, whenever the sky
lit up at sunrise, the only word they would say(of course, in their simple
language) to refer to such a phenomenon was “day,” Similarly, whenever the
sky turned dark after sunset, the only word they would possibly say to refer
to this change was “night.” Now engulfed by night, they would accordingly
feel that they had passed the day. During the day, they would be well aware
that the night would soon come. Similarly, at night they would also know for
certain that the day would sooner or later return. That the cave men had
such an awareness was an outcome of the very fact that these changes, apart
from being their routine experience, had also been recorded in their brains.
Later, however, with the advancement man made in his way of thinking, he
began to divide the day into morning, the time when the sun rises;
noon, the time
when the sun is shining right above his head; and evening, the time
after the sun sets.
Thus, whenever afternoon came, he would say, “we have
already passed the morning, and soon we shall pass the evening
too.” It could therefore be said that even in those days men had already
been familiar with such ideas as “things that have passed” and “things that
have to be passed.” In their later development, these ideas were followed by
the invention of a device by which they divide condition or measure time,
that is, the Sundial. A sundial is an instrument composed of two parts: a
gnomon and a dial plane. The gnomon is a metal plate set parallel to the
earth’s axis. It is the shadow-producing part that constantly points towards
the celestial pole. The dial plane is the flat surface marked with scales,
representing the times of day. Time is measured on the basis of the location
of the shadow cast by the gnomon on the dial plane. Since the sundial serves
its purpose only in the day-time, when the sun is shining, the dial plane
thus takes the form of only a semi-circle, on which are marked the time
scales which begin at the western side of the plane and end at the eastern
side of it. It was by means of this device that man observed that whenever
the sun moves from the east to the west, the shadow of the gnomon that fell
on the semi-circular dial plane would instead move from the west to the
east, tracing the time scales on it. And it is on the basis of all these
discoveries—the time scales and the direction towards which the shadow
moves—that our present clocks and watches are designed. Thus, when morning
comes and the shadow of the gnomon of our solar clock falls on the western
part of the semi-circular dial, at the figure 7, for instance, any incident
that occurs then is recorded in our brains and is said to have taken place
at 7 o’clock. If, later, at 12 noon we happen to recall that incident, we
are yet inclined to say that it happened at 7 o’clock this morning. And the
reason for this is only that at the time we are at 12 o’clock, we say that
the figure 7 is the past, and thus anything that occurs at the time
represented by the figure 7 is said to have occurred in the past. Needless
to say then, any figures after 12 that the shadow of the gnomon will pass
will be naturally referred to as time to come or the future.
Because every change of time scale resulting from the
change of the condition of the shadow of the gnomon on the dial plane is
also a change in nature, which corresponds to the change that occurs in the
surrounding natural environment, we thus feel that we are moving from
time to time.
To put it another way: Correspondent to the movement of
the shadows on the time-scales and to the changes in the surrounding
condition, we thus feel that we are moving from time to time. What’s
more, this has subsequently led man to think of the universe as
moving from time to time.
Although he knows quite well that the use of time scales
is, in the long term, no guarantee for accuracy, man yet looks upon any such
defects as merely a result of his own lack of knowledge, and therefore
continues to believe in the presence of the past and the future. Despite his
awareness that in different parts of the world the time scales show
different time, he still takes it for granted that the changes on the earth
correspond to the changes in time. Again, that man can have such strong
convictions is, in fact, a result of the recording of the “impressions of
the past conditions” in his brain, without his being aware of it.
What seems to complicate matters is the fact that apart
from having to face those changes of external conditions, we are also faced
with the changes within our selves. During the night we find ourselves in a
sleeping condition, while during the day we find ourselves in a variety of
physical and mental states. Illnesses, emotions, the various brainwork, etc.
cause us to be intensely influenced by all these changes. Further, the
ability of man to move from one place to another also adds to the
complexities. In the long term, we experience a physical growth, becoming an
adult and growing bigger, which makes us come to feel as if we are moving
from one period of time to another period of time. What seems to make
matters worse is the fact that the various units of time—with all those
meanings consistently attached to them, such as the past, the
present, and the future—have, since long ago, been accepted as part of our
culture.
A look back at the way the ancient people, by their
memory, came to recognize the three periods of time may cause us to wonder:
Is there something wrong with our memory, or have we been using time
erroneously such that we assume that those three periods of time do exist?
Below is a simple explanation that may be worth
comprehending.
Imagine that you have one hundred marbles with you. Now,
arrange them in a row so that they form a circle. Next, change their
configuration so that they now form a rectangle. Question: Where have the
marbles that form the circle gone? The answer is, of course, that they have
now turned into rows of marbles that form a rectangle.
Similarly, if we rearrange these rows into ones that form a triangle,
we will no longer have those rows that earlier formed the rectangle as they
have now become rows that form a triangle.
If every line is made up of a row of dots, all these dots
naturally move to other locations to form a new row or a new shape, or, to
put it another way, to change their condition into a new condition. All past
shapes have now turned into the present shape.
The example of the marbles above may serve to represent
the change of places and condition man experiences as individuals; the
atomic and the molecular changes that occur within the human body, which
result in the zygote taking the shape of an adult human being; and the
various changes that occur to the celestial objects.
As is the case of the circle illustrated above, which, by
transforming itself into a rectangle, has resulted in its losing its
circular shape, so is it with all the other conditions exemplified earlier.
This is to say that as soon as a certain condition is past, this condition
will undergo a change and turn into a new condition.
If you think this explanation sounds too difficult for
you to understand, here’s another example which, hopefully, could help
clarify matters:
Suppose, for instance, that at this very moment, there on
the sand before us are tracks of a tiger. Such a sight will naturally lead
us to believe that a tiger has ever been there. Why do we come to
such a conclusion? The answer: We already have the records or “impressions”
of such tracks of a tiger in our brains, because we have ever seen
them, either in real life or in pictures. So, as soon as we come across a
similar sight, a contact is established between the “something” as the
data-searcher and the “traces” as “impressions” of the tracks of the tiger,
so that we are consequently apt to say that a tiger has ever been
there. Now, what about all the other phenomena in this universe? Is it not
to be admitted that all these are but mere “tracks” of earlier conditions,
which consequently have led us to refer to them as things that have “ever”
happened? This explains why man has been
able to talk about his past, write history, and narrate events dating as far
back as billions of years ago. Here we learn that any assumptions about
those impressions are things that apply to only living creatures having
memory.
In short, the moment the brain is in a condition in which
we “remember” a certain thing, we assume that this “past” thing did once
take place, though what actually happens is merely that we have managed to
discover the traces of the past thing, which is now recorded in our brain as
a memory. This explains why man, when not in a state of recalling things,
feels that he is constantly at “the present.” Thus, it is the very fact that
man keeps recalling the past condition that has led him to assume that “the
past” does exist. Thus, in answer to the questions above, the writer
affirmatively says that we tend to acknowledge that “the past condition was
once there,” because we, being humans, are equipped with memory.
Remembering the past is no more than just the moment’s
condition out of the many conditions of a man’s body in general, and of his
brain in particular.
The Time Span of “the Present”
In the light of all this, Albert Einstein’s words, as
once quoted, that “Time does not exist. The only ‘time’ that exists is an
eternal moment of Now,” are indeed a lot of help to us in that they serve to
generate our understanding of the contents of this article. Let’s now take a
brief look at this thing that we commonly refer to as “now” or “the
present.”
The fact that we have now and then been expressing the
phrase, “the present” may seem to be a confirmation that the three sequences
of time do exist. Do we have an accurate definition of “the present”?
Actually, how long is the time span that we call now or the
present? If we are to say “five seconds,” this definitely means that the
time prior to the beginning of the first second must be the past? If such is
the case, how many seconds then is the “now” or “present”?
Is it one second, 0.1 second, 1/100,000,000 of a
second, or close to 0 second? Considering the fact that no matter how short
a time span is people can always split it into “the past” and “the present,”
one can thus deduce that 0 second, being the point at which no more division
could be made, would be the most accurate figure. In other words, at this
point, terms such as “the past” and “the present,” as normally used by
people, should no longer hold.
Apparently, as far as time is concerned, there are only
two choices left for us in our acceptation of the term “the present”: either
to accept it as being eternal or to simply accept it as being non-existent.
Admittedly, we have so far failed to appropriately determine the “span of
time” of what we really mean by “the present.” What’s more, we have so far
also been habitually associating “the present” with “the past” and “the
future,” despite the fact that whatever change we are experiencing is
actually a mere change of condition. To put it another way, our very
existence is one that is constantly undergoing a variety of
changes without ever knowing time, whether this be a change of the
condition of the past, the present, or the future.
Now that we have come this far, what is your opinion of
“time”? Firstly, we are at present experiencing the past condition of
things. Secondly, we feel our existence to be always at the present.
Finally, we have failed to appropriately determine the “span of time” of
what we mean by “the present.” Could it be that such incongruities are but a
mere result of the simplicity of the concept of time as initially introduced
by the ancient humans with all their limitations? If we are to argue that
this man-made time is just an attempt to “draw a division” between the
changing conditions, as they relate to the rotation of the earth, why then
has this meaning of “time” become so complicated? However, the claim that
“time” does not exist may seem to require us to replace all our
current conceptions about time with “condition.” But what do we have to lose
then? “Time” and “condition” are, after all, both terms coined by man. But
unlike time, condition can provide us with a greater sense of closeness with
the reality. Doing away with all those ideas about “time” will enable us to
see things, either the ones that exist in our natural environments or the
ones within our selves, as they really are, that is, more in terms of their
“condition.”
Conclusion
Finally, after a thorough reflection on all the above
issues we may conclude that the emergence of such anomalies concerning time
is apparently a result of man’s having memory, which consequently has led
him to establish such divisions as “the past time,” “the present time,” and
“the future time.” It is all because of our “existence” that we are led to
feel that we have “the present.” On the other hand, however, for as long as
we have the ability to condition our selves by recalling the traces of all
the memories stored in our brains from the “previous condition,” we will
consequently be led into thinking that “the past” does exist. The changing
condition that we go through every day, such as morning, afternoon, and
night having been recorded as memory, we thus assume that we will inevitably
undergo similar changes every day. This reasonably explains why we have
always believed that “the future” is there for us to undergo.
The essence of the whole issue lies in the presence of
the elementary particles, the matter which, with its eternal “feeling of
existence,” forms the contents of the universe, and which apparently
operates in accordance with the law of mass and energy conservation. It is
all these that have made the whole content of the universe an “always
present” entity without “the past condition,” “the present condition,” and
“the future condition.”
It is only because man is destined to have memory that
he, with his “feeling of existence,” feels the presence of “the past
condition,” “the present condition,” and “the future condition.” In other
words, only man himself feels those three conditions, although in
fact what really occurs is merely a “change of condition” in his brain.
That our brains keep receiving the various impressions of
“the past condition” stored in them as memory, despite the fact that there
is no such thing as “the past condition,” perhaps gives us reason enough to
conclude, from a negative standpoint, that “Memory is by nature deceptive.”
In addition to this, man with the memory he possesses has, since the
beginning of his life, always had the feeling that “the past” does exist,
although in fact it never does. That is why the writer has later muster up
the courage to entitle this article “The Deceptive Nature of Memory.”
The Dilemmatic Problem
It simply doesn’t make sense if one should say that those
genius scientists of the century are unaware of the errors concerning
“time.” It is also unlikely that they have all this time been ignoring the
issue. There have been quite a lot of articles that have tried to expose
these errors, but all these have ultimately found it difficult to make their
way up to the surface. It seems that there is something behind the whole
thing that has caused them to be in a dilemma.
This could be either that the writer refrains from
continuing his efforts, because by now he is being debarred by what he takes
to be his faith, or that the readers themselves have kept resisting the mass
publication of such articles, as they are felt to be offensive to their
beliefs. Thus, it should not be surprising that even Albert Einstein had
confined himself to only one or two paragraphs, when talking about this
issue. As to what would follow next, he seemed to have left it to the
changing conditions to change the “human mind” later. And it is also
possible that many, though they are well aware of these misconceptions, may
yet be thinking that there’s nothing wrong about using time. “What after all
do we have to lose?” they may say. What’s more, any attempt to change things
will certainly involve enormous costs,
not to mention the many advantages and disadvantages that
the change is apt to bring about. On the other hand, however, how can we
expect to resolve factual problems, if we continue to believe in things that
do not exist in reality? It may seem as if we shall have to keep on running
our lives in a world of illusions, regardless of the fact that the world in
which we reside is real.
Besides, now that we have been using the word “time” with
all “the meanings it conveys” for more than two thousand years, we have
become so accustomed to it, we don’t see any reason why we should change it.
There is just no way by which we could free ourselves of the habit of using
these adverbs of time.
Remember the case when we first began to realize the fact
that it is the earth that revolves around the sun, not the reverse? So
accustomed are we to the erroneous view that we had once held that it
continues to survive. While on the one hand we acknowledge that the earth
rotates on its own axis and revolves around the sun, on the other hand, we
have till today kept saying that the sun rises in the east and sets in the
west. Does this not imply that it is the sun that revolves around the earth
from the east to the west? Admittedly, however, despite this syntactical
error, we have yet the correct sense of the phenomenon.
We could, of course, do the same thing here too: While we
keep talking about things in terms of “the past time,” “the present time,”
and “the future time,” we may as well direct our thoughts to their “past
condition,” present condition,” and “future condition.”
Obviously a similar case will recur here, but with our
knowledge of these deficiencies concerning “time,” we could at least prevent
ourselves from being led too far astray from the reality. Besides, by being
aware of these mistakes of ours we would likely be geared towards a more
realistic, critical, universal and holistic realm of thought. Such an
awareness, it is expected, would bring about a positive impact in that it
could result in the achievement of a “common perspective” as concerns our
selves and this universe. An added impact could be that peace on the
earth and unity among humankind would be further assured.
Perhaps this is the most difficult moment for the world
to decide its choice. This is particularly true of those creationists, who
in their Holy Books have made so much mention about time. Hopefully, with
the exposure of these errors concerning time, our persistence in deceiving
our selves will not last for too long a time.
Reinarto Hadipriono
……………………………Copyright © 2002
www.deceptivememory.com
Please direct your comments to
Reinarto@Hadipriono.com
Note:
A more complete and detailed version of this article will
be published in the form of a book in mid-2004.
As I am fully aware that the readers may find this
article to be too exacting and time-consuming to contemplate, I should
therefore be very glad to accept the invitation of those who feel the need
to have my presence to help them save their time and provide additional
explanation about the subject in a forum.
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