1 result for (book:tes5 AND session:224 AND stemmed:action)
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
I made the statement that action in the present could alter the past, and now we shall set about explaining the statement.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
In other words the past and the present are real to the same extent. At times in fact the past can become more real than the present, and in such cases past actions are reacted to in the present. You take it for granted that present action can alter the future, but present actions can also alter the past.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
But this is the only reality that can be granted to the present. I am speaking now in your terms only, and this point should be clearly understood, for I am simplifying conditions considerably. A change of attitude, a new association, any of innumerable other actions, will automatically set up new electromagnetic connections, and break others. Now part of this we shall explain later, for these changes obviously affect both the future and the past. But the past, again, is continually changed by you, and by every individual. For basically you see, it is not something done and finished with, as is supposed.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
Every action changes every other action. We return to our ABC’s. Therefore every action in the present affects those actions which you call the past. Ripples from a thrown stone go out in all directions.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
I am going to go out rather far on the limb right here. Remembering what you now know about the nature of time, you should know that the apparent boundaries between past, present and future are only illusions, caused by the amount of action you can physically perceive. Therefore, it is more than possible to react in the past to an event that has not yet occurred, to be influenced by your own future.
[... 14 paragraphs ...]
All of this applies unless for example an individual is taken completely out of the physical time system. A murdered man will not be returned to physical life in the same fashion, whole and intact, as he was before the murder, for example; for he has been taken out of the particular system of action of which we are speaking.
[... 49 paragraphs ...]