Events often move faster than our ability to comprehend them.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The emotional brain responds to an event more quickly than the thinking brain.
Time moves in one direction, memory in another.
If we understand the past, we are more likely to recognise what is happening around us.
Travel at faster than the speed of light certainly can have dramatic implications that are difficult to understand, such as time travel.
Human self-understanding changes with time, and so also human consciousness deepens.
Our specious present as such is very short. We do, however, experience passing events; part of the process of the passage of events is directly there in our experience, including some of the past and some of the future.
It takes me time to realize things; I'm a speedy person but a slow thinker.
The human brain has evolved the capacity to impose a narrative, complete with chronology and cause-and-effect logic, on whatever it encounters, no matter how apparently random.
What we find is that our brains have colossal things happening in them all the time.
It always takes awfully long time to understand unbelievably simple things.