“we have entangled experiences”.our entangled experiences are particular to us but Insects, they have a 360 degree field of vision, and because they can see ultraviolet light, have different entangled experiences than we do.
I looked up the meaning “entangled” in the dictionary. It shows
1.difficult to escape
2.to make complicated
but I don’t think that applies in this sentence.
Humans and insects have different fields of view. Compared to insects, humans have a much smaller field of view. We humans can only ever see the objects that are directly in our line of sight. We cannot see objects that are to the side or behind us.
This is different with insects. Insects can see everything that is happening around them because their field of view is 360 degrees. That is why we humans have a limited visual perception ability compared to insects.
yes sir …but I want to know meaning “entangled” …
in my view here what implies "whole experience " according their ability. It doesn’t apply positive or negative experience.
But dictionary shows
entangled experience=difficult experience
Eg :He tackles the entanglement
A word always has many different meanings, depending on the context in which it is used. Therefore, you should never try to learn the meaning of individual words. Instead, you must always look at the entire phrase or sentence in which the word occurs.
Does this come from the “Matrix of existence” guy?. That guy was making up his own terminology.
Either way, this is not a normal use of the word “entangled”. “Entangled” means something like “trapped”. It can mean physically trapped (like trapped in a spider’s web). Or it can be metaphorical. As a metaphor it might mean psychologically trapped, or trapped due to circumstances.
Tangle vs Entangle ( both are verbs )
Tangled vs Entangled ( both are adjectives )
You can tangle a rope. ( verb ) To make a knotty mess of the rope.
A tangled rope. Tangled hair that is difficult to comb. ( adjective )
Entangle in rope. ( verb ) To trap something within the knotty mess of rope. Entangled in rope (adjective ).
The rope itself is tangled. The object trapped within the rope is entangled.
If something is entangled, it is difficult to escape. But entangled is more than that. It means there are several things holding the object, such as several strands of a spider’s web. Or you might get entangled in your bed sheets if they get wrapped around you.
If you are in a room and the door is stuck closed, then you are trapped, and it is difficult to escape. But you are not entangled.
That’s right. The problem is that pretty much anyone can make up arbitrary sentences by randomly throwing words together. These sentences may be grammatically correct, but they don’t make sense and they don’t serve the purpose of language, which is to facilitate meaningful conversation.