The realestates of life and science from the perspective of the human being entail its existence on a free floating body, the earth, and gravity that holds him feet first to the land that he navigates.

As an example is it possible to imagine the life of an insect in a garden where the world is so and so many square feet or acres and physical navigation paths existing upon any variety of plants there might be upside down, vlertical or horizontal to the force of gravity, distances are in ratio to garden boundaries as opposed to earthly horizons and views of the stars?. Can insects even see the stars?

Do you think the human conception of nature and the laws we have evolved to describe it are overdetermined, undersetermined, full or incomplete considering this alternate possible perspective; though involving significant differences in physical description of the external environment, forces and ranges, involves little applied adjustment to the understanding of internal (physiological/cellular/genetic) processes. With regards to Lewis Carrolls' Alice in Wonderland, are there possible new insights, understanding and acquired knowledge from an imaginative extrapolation that displaces the (human) self as a navigator of earthly terrain faceing either the horizon or vertically the stars of space to that of a mineaturized occupant of a garden patch situated on the earth?

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