Africa Speaks Reasoning Forum

SCIENCE, SOCIOLOGY, RELIGION => Spirituality => Topic started by: Iniko Ujaama on July 09, 2007, 04:21:03 PM



Title: How do we relate to time? How should we percieve it?
Post by: Iniko Ujaama on July 09, 2007, 04:21:03 PM
Greetings to all and blessed love.
I have some questions concerning time:
Ultimately the ALL IS. The All is beyond time as it is all that exists. Time, I understand as an aspect of THE ALL in its differentiated aspect which brings into being PROCESS or relative changes which is TIME. Things change their positions and act in relation to each other(TIME).

Will we move eventually back to the initial (timewise) singularity?

Is the past merely evidence of the inevitable in time? Is the past that fragment of time which we in this stage of our process of existence are now sure was inevitable or had to happen in the way that it did?

Or is TIME as experienced by each individual the creation of (or journey on) one possible path along a plethora of possibilities?

ARe we subject to time or is time subject to us? Within the ALL as we all are, is our entire existence already determined as part of the expansion-contraction of material aspect of the ALL?
blessings
Iniko ujaama


Title: Re: How do we relate to time? How should we percieve it?
Post by: wezekana on November 16, 2007, 08:39:41 PM
Any divergence you perceive is conceptual, which time has the ability to accomplish here (third dimension/duality, at least, and possibly trinitarian activity within total unity). Mostly people talk about what they see happen to the human body. Microbial agents and intestinal wear and tear is what they really see. Not time.

The concept of time is shattered by the Omnipresence of the Almighty.

Without beginning or end is a very difficult concept for humans to grasp.

Much less the fact that they are, too, entwined into that fabric.


Title: Cool perspective on time from a Martial Artist
Post by: jdfellow on December 20, 2007, 05:38:14 PM
http://martial-arts-zen.blogspot.com/2007/09/learn-to-slow-down-time-and-your.html