A Philosopher's Vignettes Chapter 7 Continues: Origin Of Hope

Published on 18 October 2025 at 17:00

The Fluidity Of Time

 

Reflection On Time

 

Born on the 14th. March 1879 and died on the 18th of April 1955, Albert Einstein said, ‘Time is relative.’

Time continuously moves, but it seems to have no idea where it’s going.

Time has many periods, although it’s the same phase.

Time cannot be frozen; however, we hold onto the past.

Time moves steadily, yet we’re in a race where the wrong face comes in second place, and then first class is never last.

Time to work is their time to play when all we do is toil all day.

Does time convert a character, or can a person change in time?

 

Here is a brief tutorial relating to times gone by that highlights important events in Western culture. It is an informative tool for those who are none the wiser and young, curious minds.

Throughout history, men of strength, power, and influence have enforced their vision of how society should function, using the rule of law around economics as a tool to enslave nations. The rule of law affects person-to-person behaviour, controls the citizens’ consumption of resources, and punishes the population.

Remember, just because someone wins a war doesn’t mean they’re right to impose their culture and belief onto another. The truth is never to be told; the untold truth is to reveal the facts, and then the reality of our destiny is known.

During and after ancient wars, the winner writes the narrative, dominates local customs and silences the violence inflicted on the innocent victims. The loser’s leading figures get murdered, the women are used, abused, raped, impregnated, then persecuted, deemed to look less than an equal, and then suffer at the psychologically harsh political hand of the wrong. This must be a legal right for the meek and humble injured parties. 

Let’s look at the time in the blink of an eye, which is communicated in the following poetic prose.

As the clock ticks, seconds are hundreds of years.

As you read the passing moments, you see humanity’s lifetime over two days.

 

Time’s Account

 

I’m fascinated with time; it constantly inspires my mind, it wanders in on time, and it always seems to rhyme.

Whatever the time of the day, or whenever the time of the night, at one point in the day, will be the right place when it’s night.

You could be anywhere in time and space if you had the right time.

But first, the one thing that comes to mind before being aware of time is whether there is an idea on your mind; after all, ‘I never asked to be here.’

Then again, can anyone remember being posed with any question before birth?

 

Before the cosmic dawn of time, there was once upon a time an inspiring image that inspired a mind. A thought appeared in the creators’ minds: a man and a woman living in a universe that the creators had created. Given the time, it came across the creators’ minds, and a second thought entered the collective mind: It takes many minds to make a God, but no one god is greater than many minds.’

To coin the phrase in modern times, John Heywood arrived in 1497 and sadly departed in 1580. As a playwright and poet, he wrote, ‘Many hands make light work.’

While pondering the many minds, a weird and wondrous thought was conjured up: ‘One God with many faces loves the many minds.’

A thoughtful thought provoked a magical mystic force of love to emit a positive, energetic charge when hearing a formulated response. This equation equates, ‘Equal to none, forever forgiving love.’

Considering the time, earlier than when time began, there must have been time to prepare for an idea on your mind. Before recorded time, there’s an innate proclamation inscribed in your mind, declaring, ‘Defend your logic, whoever loves the Father, Nature, God, must love thy neighbour, thou shalt not kill with free will, go forth, and multiply.’ 

The Earth has been here since the dawn of time; isn’t it amazing?

 

 

The big question

 

As a witness, you see a man put a glass on a table, and then he walks away.

Later, two other men walk past the glass on the table when one says,  ‘Who put the glass on the table?’

The second man replies, ‘I don’t know.’

So, the first man states, ‘Oh, no one put it there. There is no God.’

How can that work, to say no one of intelligence put the universe where it is?

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