I wonder how much you ‘know’ about the nature and being of the places, people and situations you are involved with… that is not primarily a set of descriptions and evaluations. In other words, when you taste an apple, you have knowledge. But what happens when you describe this, or experience the words that might be associated with such an experience… without the experience? ‘Knowledge’ in ‘the bible’ often referred not to -sex- as we too commonly misapprehend it, but profound intimacy. This needn’t be physical to be real, but it must be experiential, and although linguistic experience -is- experience, it is not experiential knowledge of its subjects, but rather, the expression of such knowledge as representational displays.
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