peacegirl
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2024
- Messages
- 3,895
- Gender
- Female
- Basic Beliefs
- I believe in determinism which is the basis of my worldview
Then you explain it. All I am doing is replacing wavelength/frequency with image. Using the word "image" doesn't change the meaning. I think people understand what he meant.I can assure you that I don't.You know what I mean.
At this point, I have serious doubts that even YOU know what you mean.
Particularly when you come out with utter drivel like:
Literally every part of this is wrong.The "image" is the light that is the precursor that allows the brain to see in delayed time, according to science.
Particularly the idea that any of it is "according to science"
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They reasoned that since it takes longer for the sound from an airplane to reach us when 15,000 feet away than when 5000; and since it takes longer for light to reach us the farther it is away when starting its journey, light and sound must function alike in other respects, which is false, although it is true that the farther away we are from the source of sound, the fainter it becomes, as light becomes dimmer when its source is farther away. If the sound from a plane, even though we can’t see it on a clear day, tells us it is in the sky, why can’t we see the plane if an image is being reflected towards the eye on the waves of light? The answer is very simple. An image is not being reflected. We cannot see the plane simply because the distance reduced its size to where it was impossible to see it with the naked eye, but we could see it with a telescope. We can’t see bacteria either with the naked eye, but we can through a microscope. The actual reason we are able to see the moon is because there is enough light present, and it is large enough to be seen. The explanation as to why the sun looks to be the size of the moon, although much larger, is because it is much much farther away, which is the reason it would look like a star to someone living on a planet at the distance of Rigel. This proves conclusively that the distance between someone looking and the object seen has no relation to time because the images are not traveling toward the optic nerve on waves of light; therefore, it takes no time to see the moon, the sun, and the distant stars. To paraphrase this another way, if you could sit upon the star Rigel with a telescope powerful enough to see me writing this very moment, you would see me at the exact same time that a person sitting right next to me would.

