Not sure if I understand what you are asking but... we evolved senses to make use of the inputs in our surroundings. Human senses are sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell. All of this is based on inputs - light, sound, matter - that had existed long before there were any humans, or indeed any life. Light was there, there just wasn't anybody to observe it.
And this has implications for science.
Light has a finite speed (cca 300 000 km/s). This means that watching the world around us is already a type of time travel - even if it is a fraction of a second, we never actually see things at the exact moment they are happening at. And at interstellar distances, this delay is significant.
What this means is that light is essentially a "message in a bottle" from our past. If we watch at a galaxy that is a billion light years away, we see it as it was a billion years ago. And from that, we can extrapolate what our own galaxy was like a billion years ago.
One of these answers is probably to a question you hadn't asked, but...