Some basic grammar: a noun is a name (NAME, not the thing itself) of a person, place, thing, action , idea or feeling. To name something is to gain control over it, to define it, to say what it is. Adam was given the job of naming the animals (and one would assume plants and other things, too) As such, he was given a control over crea…
Some basic grammar: a noun is a name (NAME, not the thing itself) of a person, place, thing, action , idea or feeling. To name something is to gain control over it, to define it, to say what it is. Adam was given the job of naming the animals (and one would assume plants and other things, too) As such, he was given a control over created reality. because he could name them and their interactions. Without naming something, we cannot control or define it. Current power seekers are endeavoring to change the names of things, so that they no longer mean what they used to mean. That naming of things gives immense control. Beware the mandatory naming process.
Some basic grammar: a noun is a name (NAME, not the thing itself) of a person, place, thing, action , idea or feeling. To name something is to gain control over it, to define it, to say what it is. Adam was given the job of naming the animals (and one would assume plants and other things, too) As such, he was given a control over created reality. because he could name them and their interactions. Without naming something, we cannot control or define it. Current power seekers are endeavoring to change the names of things, so that they no longer mean what they used to mean. That naming of things gives immense control. Beware the mandatory naming process.