When I hear that phrase, I picture two guys looking at the scene before them. One guy scratches his head and asks the other, “What do you make of that?”
It’s a great question because it belies the fact that we don’t see things as they are; rather, we see things as we imagine them to be. We have to make sense (i.e., create understanding) of things to store them in our minds.
It’s a great question because it belies the fact that we don’t see things as they are; rather, we see things as we imagine them to be. We have to make sense (i.e., create understanding) of things to store them in our minds.