the requirements for sight, which are luminosity (there has to be light at the eye), and the object's size (too small or too distant, there will be no light in which to see said object.)
The term
luminosity in conventional usage regards radiated or emitted electromagnetic waves. In the context of this discussion about light, it is NOT
luminosity that determines whether light is visible by humans; rather, it is the apparent
brightness upon which visibility depends, and that brightness derives at least from luminosity and distance. This means necessarily that light travels, and you agree that light travels.
With regards to luminosity, the sun emits light. Does the moon emit light? If it is said that the moon emits light, then there is a distinction between sunlight and moonlight in that the light emitted by the moon is not light for which the moon is the source whereas the sun is the source of sunlight. Another way of depicting this difference is to say that the moon reflects light; moonlight is a reflection; moonlight is reflected light.
However, you apparently deny that the moon reflects light. You say:
light travels, but it doesn't bounce off an object, traveling with that information to the eye through space/time and allowing the mind to generate an image.
Light that is reflected is light that "bounces off". If you deny that the moon reflects light, do you regard the moon as the very source of its own light? Do you think that the sun generates its own light?
I will presume that you think that the sun is the source of its own light, and I will presume that you do not think of the moon as generating its own light.
If the moon is not the source of its own light and if the moon does not reflect light, then the moon always and utterly lacks luminosity and, therefore, brightness; hence, the moon can never be seen.
But the moon can be seen.
In the alternative, you might mean to say that the moon reflects light, and that light travels, but that light is devoid of anything that can serve as information regarding that from which the light travels. So, how is the moon seen, especially given the claim that the eyes are not (and are no part of) a sense organ - there being only the four other senses by which humans gather information about the world around them?
You claim that traveling light in no way contributes to images generated by the mind. Because vision is not one of the senses? So, does the mind use the other senses to generate an image of the mind? Does the mind use touch to see the moon? Does it use hearing to see the moon? How about taste? Does it smell the moon?
Because by your reckoning, nothing comes to the mind from the eyes to serve as information to be used in generating the image. And it does no good to say that there has to be "light at the eye", because, again by your reckoning, the light at the eye contains no information to be used in generating an image. Yet, the mind does generate an image, and it clearly is not generated on the basis of touch, hearing, taste, or smell, and it is supposedly not generated on the basis of input from vision.
At this point you might claim that "light at the eye" contains information that can be used for generating an image of that which is seen, but then you have the problem of how that light has such information if light traveling from the seen thing does not have that information.
The mind includes an ability to imagine. Does the mind simply imagine the moon? A baby duck peeping is real - not because it is imagined as seen - but, instead, since it can be heard? How does the mind distinguish between something imagined from something real if the imagined/imaged thing cannot be touched, heard, tasted, or smelled?