Interessante:
I. Time and Space
WE TEND TO misunderstand the nature, and exaggerate
the importance, of 'time' and 'space'.
There are no such 'things' (they do not exist in their
own right): these come into apparent existence, i.e., they
'function' only as a mechanism whereby events, extended
spatially and sequentially, may become cognisable. They
accompany events and render their development realisable.
In themselves they have no existence whatever. They are
appearances, and their apparent existence is deduced from
the events they accompany and render perceptible. They are
hypothetical, like the 'ether', symbols, like algebra, psychic
inferences to aid in the cognisance of the universe we
objectify, and they neither pre-exist, nor survive apart from,
the events they accompany, but are utilised in function of
each such event as it occurs.
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