bilby
Fair dinkum thinkum
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Sure it is.That is true, but what is happening is more easily seen when we look at celestial objects. It is assumed that light strikes an object where the pattern (the reflection of that object) goes on forever, but this is not what occurs.The light that is recflected off the object is not an image.It is incumbent upon me to distinguish between the word "image" (the light that is reflected off the object)
That - That right there - is the light that is reflected off the object.and photons (packets of electromagnetic energy) that travel through space/time,
You are the one failing to understand. An image is not just light; it is the pattern of light that exists in the focal plane of a lens. The light at that plane is in the exact same pattern as the light as it reflected off the object, due to the simple fact that light travels at constant speed in a given medium, and in a straight line.or you will never understand this concept.
Nope. Light "fades" with distance for two reasons: The inverse square law, which simply means that photons are equally numerous at any given distance, but the area over which they are spread increases proportionally to the square of that distance; And scattering by intervening particles, which is only relevant when such particles are present, and so does not apply to the vacuum of interstellar space.Light from the object fades
An individual photon must continue to travel forever, because there's no mechanism for its energy to go anywhere else - the First Law of Thermodynamics means a photon cannot lose energy as it travels through a vacuum.
The requirements for sight is that a sufficient number of photons must arrive at the retina to stimulate the optic nerve, and must be focussed at the plane of the retina such that the pattern of arriving photons matches the pattern they formed when they departed.or is not seen at all if it doesn't meet the requirements (size, proximity, and brightness).
Size, proximity* and brightness are all contributors to those requirements, but are not sufficient, as we can trivially demonstrate by having a large and luminous object close by, but placing an opaque object between it and our eyes.
Yes. And in order to do so, the photons that form that pattern must travel from object to retina.We can see the object as long as the pattern makes contact with the retinaor a telescope.
We cannot see anything just because the photons make contact with a telescope, unless and until they go on to stimulate our retinae.
We see the object because light travels from it to our retinae.IOW, we see the object because it is there to be seen.
We do not see what is there to be seen unless we look; And looking is the act of orienting and focussing our eyes such that the light arriving from the object is focussed at our retinae.
Dur.The light does not bring the pattern of the object over space/time without the object being in our field of view.
That you felt this was worthy of comment suggests to me that "field of view" may be another technical term whose meaning you do not know, and/or which you are using incorrectly here.
No, they don't. They must necessarily maintain the pattern they had when emitted or last reflected, because they all travel at the same speed.Photons travel through space/time without a pattern.
No. You missed several steps. When they strike an object, they are over there, striking that object; At that moment, our retinae are over here. How does the fact that the photons are striking the object get across the gap from there to here?They are electromagnetic packets of energy, and when they strike an object, we see the object due to its unique absorptive and reflective properties.
When they strike an object, they bounce off (or do not) due to its unique absorptive and reflective properties. The pattern of those properties is then carried as a pattern of photons across the gap to our eyes, where it is focussed onto our retinae. Only then do we see the object.
If this doesn't happen, then the photons over there striking the object cannot do anything that influences us, over here, in any way.
It always was.Light becomes a necessary condition of sight
Of course it does. If it doesn't, WHAT DOES?but it doesn't bring the external world to our eyes in delayed time.
The object is THERE; Our eyes are HERE. How does the information that the object even exists, much less any information about what it looks like, cross that gap?
No, it doesn't.It reveals the world to us in real time.
* You were denying that one earlier; You said that distance and time were irrelevant. Have you changed your mind?