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Friday, July 4, 2014

NLT the next step Part 20 PRE-EQUATION ANALYSIS NLT the rewards of reading the NLT theory

I was close to brain dead when I posted the last blog, didn't even re-read the section I wrote.  There is a great section in the book I'm listening to on tape that makes the case for dogs domesticating people as opposed to the other way around.
Before the Dawn by N. Wade.
Nicholas may not have said all of this but he at least implied that dogs domesticated people and here's how: 1) Three wolves started the whole dog thing (maybe three different, but probably 3 from the same litter).  It takes too long for people to breed tameness so the dogs must have acquired it by surviving by being happy to be in proximity to people (probably for the left over food)
2) Dogs major initial function was to bark.  This allowed people to settle in one place since they'd be protected (this part may be more implied than said).
3) People didn't own much because they were nomadic, but dogs could follow them and got attached to one person (one family is my experience) and so ownership was born, even in an otherwise nomadic setting.
There's a lot of fun stuff in there like the whole "something to keep you warm, tracking and emergency food source"; but mainly it was on how important the "invention of the dog was to man,"  and how it spread like wildfire and how the dog may have invented main instead of man inventing the dog or at least civilized man, well assuming you would say we are civilized.
It was also interesting, as I understand it, even south american dogs come from the original three and how the original three were apparently asian dogs.
Anyway, this is supposed to be about non-linear time and not dogs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z67FsTNpexg

Occasionally, I like to revisit sort of weird stuff that isn't used, but isn't lost either.  Like this take on exponential NLT-this didn't make the cut, by the way, but its sort of intriguing and if time allows, I might pursue it further.  Right now it looks more like straight exponential growth, but I need to find a case of CT2 to CT3 change to really get a grip on this.

NLT suggests more than exponential growth.  It also suggests a factor of the number of dimensions of the clock time in question.
The first movement is CT0-CT1 suggestion an n+1 function to get to dimensions.  CT1-CT2 2+1, CT2-Ct3 3+1, or 1^2+1, 2^2+1, 3^2+1, 4^2+1.

Anyway, that didn't make the cut, but this did:
COMPRESSION: It will be argued from this point forward that the universe is created by a “compression” of time coordinates. That is, we know that energy “slows coordinate change” in the “lower clock times” and “compresses” to form matter” (defined as having consistent coordinate changes in NLT). We can speculate that gravitational time (CT1) combines to form photons when CT2 goes non-linear.
If one accepts dimension, this is less likely. If space exists, then all gravity points P(CT1(D1(x,y,z), F1(x,y,z)) occupy the same place where x is changing, but none of the other coordinates. P stands for a gravitational point here. D1 is the one dimensional characteristic features and F1 the force features. There is nothing to combine. But if space doesn’t exist, you can have multiple one dimensional points.  

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