Anonymous ID: c27b92 June 13, 2021, 5:33 a.m. No.13892003   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2011 >>2013 >>2017 >>2182 >>2202

Morning all

 

Pennsylvania Anons

 

https://www.auditthevotepa.com/

 

Go to auditthevotepa.com andsign the petitionto audit the Pa. 2020 votes

Only people living in Pennsylvania can sign the petition

so

SPREAD TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW IN PA.

 

We Are The Keystone

Anonymous ID: c27b92 June 13, 2021, 6:25 a.m. No.13892240   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13891944

>>13891745

 

y'all reminded me of this old tale oflooking and not seeinguntil the mind was updated with some appropriate software as it were

 

….The term "ships not seen", in the context of scientific discovery, is reference to the famous story of how, upon arrival to the new world, the native Indians, supposedly, could “not see the ships” in the harbor, even though they were in plain sight, supposedly, because they did not have the proper mental slots or receptors to process or accept such foreign or rather never before seen views—meaning that, often times, scientists and modern thinkers, closed into a certain way of seeing or thinking about things, will often not "see" what is directly in front of them; a term which has a cousin similarity to not seeing the forest amid the trees and or not seeing the trees amid the forest.

 

In social and psychological folklore is the old puzzling tale of invisible ships, plain or visible to the anatomy of the eye, but invisible or not recognizable to the perception of the mind. This tale is found in the various forms in journals and ships logs of early European explorers to the new worlds, particularly Christopher Columbus (1492), Ferdinand Magellan (1520), and James Cook (1770), each describing local natives not being able, perceptually, to ‘see’ the large ships, because, supposedly, ships are reasoned to be beyond their understanding or outside of their experience. In one account left by Joseph Banks, a botanist aboard Cook’s ship, to cite one example of this frequently mentioned phenomenon:

 

“The ship passed within a quarter of a mile of them and yet they scarce lifted their eyes from their employment; I was almost inclined to think that attentive to their business and deafened by the noise of the surf they neither saw nor heard her go past them. Not one was once observed to stop and look towards the ship; they pursued their way in all appearance entirely unmoved by the neighborhood of so remarkable an object as a ship must necessarily be to people who have never seen one.”

 

https://www.eoht.info/page/Ships%20not%20seen