130:7.5 [[Animals]] do not [[sense]] time as does man, and even to man, because of his sectional and [[circumscribed]] view, time appears as a [[succession]] of [[events]]; but as man [[ascends]], as he [[progresses]] inward, the enlarging view of this [[event]] [[procession]] is such that it is discerned more and more in its [[wholeness]]. That which formerly appeared as a [[succession]] of events then will be viewed as a [[whole]] and perfectly related [[cycle]]; in this way will [[circular]] [[simultaneity]] increasingly displace the onetime [[consciousness]] of the [[linear]] [[sequence]] of [[events]]. | 130:7.5 [[Animals]] do not [[sense]] time as does man, and even to man, because of his sectional and [[circumscribed]] view, time appears as a [[succession]] of [[events]]; but as man [[ascends]], as he [[progresses]] inward, the enlarging view of this [[event]] [[procession]] is such that it is discerned more and more in its [[wholeness]]. That which formerly appeared as a [[succession]] of events then will be viewed as a [[whole]] and perfectly related [[cycle]]; in this way will [[circular]] [[simultaneity]] increasingly displace the onetime [[consciousness]] of the [[linear]] [[sequence]] of [[events]]. |