The Relativity of Distance
brianlux
Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 44,428
Here's the scene:
You live in a house on Manning Hill.
Your mail box is on another hill exactly 100 yards from your house as the crow flies.
There is a gravel path that leads straight from your house to the mail box that undulates up and down over several small rolling ridges (much like a mini basin and range topography).
The crow flies from your house straight to the mail box and travels exactly 100 yards.
You walk straight from your house to the mail box but must traverse up and down the rolling ridges, thus your walk is more than 100 yards.
Your pet ant walks straight from your house to the mail box but not only must traverse over the undulations of the rolling ridges but also the undulations of the gravel in the path and thus must walk much farther than you do.
Your pet microorganism walks strait from your house to the mail box but must not only traverse the undulations of the rolling ridges and the undulations of the gravel but also the many tiny cracks and fissure on each piece of gravel and thus must travel a very, very great distance to get to the mail box.
Distance is relative.
This seems fractal like-- maybe even verging on chaos.
Or it may just mean that some will have to travel farther to get to the same place.
You live in a house on Manning Hill.
Your mail box is on another hill exactly 100 yards from your house as the crow flies.
There is a gravel path that leads straight from your house to the mail box that undulates up and down over several small rolling ridges (much like a mini basin and range topography).
The crow flies from your house straight to the mail box and travels exactly 100 yards.
You walk straight from your house to the mail box but must traverse up and down the rolling ridges, thus your walk is more than 100 yards.
Your pet ant walks straight from your house to the mail box but not only must traverse over the undulations of the rolling ridges but also the undulations of the gravel in the path and thus must walk much farther than you do.
Your pet microorganism walks strait from your house to the mail box but must not only traverse the undulations of the rolling ridges and the undulations of the gravel but also the many tiny cracks and fissure on each piece of gravel and thus must travel a very, very great distance to get to the mail box.
Distance is relative.
This seems fractal like-- maybe even verging on chaos.
Or it may just mean that some will have to travel farther to get to the same place.
"It's a sad and beautiful world"
-Roberto Benigni
Post edited by Unknown User on
0
Comments
-
I told my pet ant to stop reading my mail!Your Disciples Are Riddled With Metaphors.
08/21/2009: Toronto, ON
09/11/2011: Toronto, ON
07/16/2013: London, ON
10/12/2013: Buffalo, NY
10/16/2014: Detroit, MI
05/08/2016: Ottawa, ON
05/10/2016: Toronto, ON
05/12/2016: Toronto, ON
08/20/2016: Chicago, IL
08/22/2016: Chicago, IL0 -
I used my slingshot to take out the crow...I don't need some bird squaking at me to hurry up.The joy of life comes from our encounters with new experiences, and hence there is no greater joy than to have an endlessly changing horizon, for each day to have a new and different sun.
- Christopher McCandless0 -
interesting parable Brian.Pick up my debut novel here on amazon: Jonny Bails Floatin (in paperback) (also available on Kindle for $2.99)0
-
Most everything's relative, and not just in the physical sense.
Traversing from point A to B can't be the same journey for anyone or anything...part of what I love about this life.
(and thanks for the smile, Shorty!)0 -
So it sounds the smaller the mind the farther it has to go ...
bing bing bing bing0 -
I'm not sure what the mind (did you mean brain size?) has to do with it, when this is related more to size itself - obstacles. At least from here, this little perspective of mine.pandora wrote:So it sounds the smaller the mind the farther it has to go ...
bing bing bing bing
I look at it this way. Two people, same sized brain - one in a wheelchair, the other not. The former will have a tougher time - a longer or more difficult path to make his way, while the latter won't.
Bing-o?0 -
Nope wasn't talking brain size ... mind size.hedonist wrote:
I'm not sure what the mind (did you mean brain size?) has to do with it, when you're talking body size.pandora wrote:So it sounds the smaller the mind the farther it has to go ...
bing bing bing bing
I look at it this way. Two people, same sized brain - one in a wheelchair, the other not. The former will have a tougher time - a longer or more difficult path to make his way, while the latter won't.
Bing-o?
With that in mind... the person in the wheelchair may be miles ahead, those tougher times and all.0 -
I edited my post, as I don't think the OP was talking about the mind. Then again, I could be wrong.pandora wrote:
Nope wasn't talking brain size ... mind size.hedonist wrote:
I'm not sure what the mind (did you mean brain size?) has to do with it, when you're talking body size.pandora wrote:So it sounds the smaller the mind the farther it has to go ...
bing bing bing bing
I look at it this way. Two people, same sized brain - one in a wheelchair, the other not. The former will have a tougher time - a longer or more difficult path to make his way, while the latter won't.
Bing-o?
With that in mind... the person in the wheelchair may be miles ahead, those tougher times and all.
We all walk the long road.
(plus, the ant may be facing tougher times too!)0 -
I'm pretty fucking big compared to that microorganism, but sometimes I swear I feel those minuscule undulations of the rolling ridges in each grain of sand..Pick up my debut novel here on amazon: Jonny Bails Floatin (in paperback) (also available on Kindle for $2.99)0
-
What happens if the crow eats the ant?0
-
pandora wrote:So it sounds the smaller the mind the farther it has to go ...
bing bing bing binghedonist wrote:
I edited my post, as I don't think the OP was talking about the mind. Then again, I could be wrong.pandora wrote:
Nope wasn't talking brain size ... mind size.hedonist wrote:I'm not sure what the mind (did you mean brain size?) has to do with it, when you're talking body size.
I look at it this way. Two people, same sized brain - one in a wheelchair, the other not. The former will have a tougher time - a longer or more difficult path to make his way, while the latter won't.
Bing-o?
With that in mind... the person in the wheelchair may be miles ahead, those tougher times and all.
We all walk the long road.
(plus, the ant may be facing tougher times too!)
Right, Hedonist!
No, it's more big picture than that. It's more about things not being what they seem."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
Sometimes that 100-yard walk can seem unfairly too long. On those days, I suggest email, texting and skype to get your communication. Suddenly, those 100 yards fade to nothing at all ...
Of course, othertimes you really want to have your phyiscal mail. During those times, if the walk is too tough and too long, simply move your mail box closer to home."Where's KW?"
"Let's check Idaho."0 -
kw18 wrote:if the walk is too tough and too long, simply move your mail box closer to home.
the postman might get a little upset, because then he has to make a longer trek.The joy of life comes from our encounters with new experiences, and hence there is no greater joy than to have an endlessly changing horizon, for each day to have a new and different sun.
- Christopher McCandless0 -
I don't know, aren't 'they' saying the ants are the only thing that will survive?hedonist wrote:
I edited my post, as I don't think the OP was talking about the mind. Then again, I could be wrong.pandora wrote:
Nope wasn't talking brain size ... mind size.hedonist wrote:I'm not sure what the mind (did you mean brain size?) has to do with it, when you're talking body size.
I look at it this way. Two people, same sized brain - one in a wheelchair, the other not. The former will have a tougher time - a longer or more difficult path to make his way, while the latter won't.
Bing-o?
With that in mind... the person in the wheelchair may be miles ahead, those tougher times and all.
We all walk the long road.
(plus, the ant may be facing tougher times too!)
yeah I wasn't sure, took what he was literally talking about and made an analogy
to our real journey's is all.0 -
In theory,
the human in this scenario
is the only entity with a concept of distance.
The crow, the ant, the micro-organism,
none of these can gauge the distance to the mailbox
using any concrete form of measurement.
Only the human can estimate the distance
in terms of something that others might understand,
like metres or yards.
To the others, it's simply a LONG way to go.
Distance may be relative,
but it is the awareness of how to conceive + quantify distance
that makes it universal,
at least for humanfolk!
Cheers.'Cause you don't give blood and take it back again.0 -
pandora wrote:I don't know, aren't 'they' saying the ants are the only thing that will survive?
yeah I wasn't sure, took what he was literally talking about and made an analogy
to our real journey's is all.
"They" be me."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
pandora wrote:
You mean in your reality?brianlux wrote:[
Right, Hedonist!
No, it's more big picture than that. It's more about things not being what they seem.
Possibly. My reality might be similar to yours. On the other hand, if it is not, that's ok too. R. D. Laing put it this way:
“What we call ‘normal’ is a product of repression, denial, splitting, projection, introjection and other forms of destructive action on experience. It is radically estranged from the structure of being. The more one sees this, the more senseless it is to continue with generalized descriptions of supposedly specifically schizoid, schizophrenic, hysterical ‘mechanisms.’ There are forms of alienation that are relatively strange to statistically ‘normal’ forms of alienation. The ‘normally’ alienated person, by reason of the fact that he acts more or less like everyone else, is taken to be sane. Other forms of alienation that are out of step with the prevailing state of alienation are those that are labeled by the ‘formal’ majority as bad or mad.”
― R.D. Laing, The Politics of Experience"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
Categories
- All Categories
- 149.3K Pearl Jam's Music and Activism
- 110.5K The Porch
- 293 Vitalogy
- 35.1K Given To Fly (live)
- 3.5K Words and Music...Communication
- 39.6K Flea Market
- 39.6K Lost Dogs
- 58.8K Not Pearl Jam's Music
- 10.6K Musicians and Gearheads
- 29.1K Other Music
- 17.8K Poetry, Prose, Music & Art
- 1.1K The Art Wall
- 56.9K Non-Pearl Jam Discussion
- 22.2K A Moving Train
- 31.7K All Encompassing Trip
- 2.9K Technical Stuff and Help




