It wasn't wise to let casual observers know one's real thoughts.
But the human observer would never know the difference.
But the observers on the ground knew that each of them was using all his strength.
The most interesting thing about the procession, however, was something no casual observer could know.
"As all close observers know, a school is never just a physical structure, there's a culture to every educational setting," the letter says.
In other words, as observers of the political process have long known, it is sometimes hard to talk and think at the same time.
But because the moving observers don't know anything about their movement, they don't recognize this.
But this shows that political observers know that's simply name recognition.
An observer cannot know anything about objects that exist in themselves, apart from being observed.
But the observers on Outpost must have already known that.