Pages

Sunday, July 13, 2014

NLT-the next step Part 32: MATHEMATICS WITHOUT DIMENSION

Sunday Morning.
I should have saved something more spiritual or perhaps I should skip ahead and find something, but neither of those seems like it would work very well.
Instead perhaps I'll talk about someone of the things that are interesting to me.
Old black and white movies and books.  I am curbing my enthusiasm since there are many things I really want to talk about, but I guess I won't.
What is it about the old movies that attracts me?  There are things which you don't see in movies today (or real life too much), like prayer, manners, patriotism (a lot like we have today, but more innocent, more sincere), real diners (still around, but harder to find), real wood fire places and people smoking cigarettes anywhere and it appearing not to bother anyone.  Its interesting .  The ones where they show people living are enlightening.  They have things to do that don't involve television and they take trains and buses to get places, they buy things in stores, conserve everything and the outdoors is beautiful and unspoiled.  They eat flaming plum puddings and sing together.  I suppose they suffer from the Nostalgia of World War I, but then that's "Midnight in Paris."  And they have stories that have to be carried by actors, in most cases without any special effects.  And redemption, where do you find redemption?
It's interesting to see the country captured in all out war.  It's the same and different as what we have now.  The United States is in the great undeclared world war, there is China, the un-real economic war; but one of which the government is largely ignorant.  There is a similar set of posts in here and a summary which will be posted with similar insights to the ones on the universe here if I ever get around to it.  Those cover how this current undeclared world war is like so many others that have already occurred and to some extent it is about how to win it. 
But it is a different war, the un-real war.  It is the real wars where people are getting hurt.  The United States is at war all over the world and it is all out war in that its survival is at stake which is the definition of all out war.  Otherwise you'd have to say the US was always at war, the most warlike of all nations, protected only by the veneer of the self-justification of the West, that at least some of it is in the name of freedom, however poorly that works outside of the west.
  Of course, if you're really in it, "war is only 10 feet wide.  If you asked 100 people what it is like they'd all give a different answer."  The shooting war is the obvious one, but the truth is that the economic war is the one that endangers the country the most, and its the one that makes the war all out war.  How we can survive it without recognizing we are at war is one of the big questions and perhaps without understanding the enemies; but that's another set of entries.  Perhaps only if the US can capture the good parts of life in black and white movies and figure out how to bring them into a world where you have to be modern to survive will life be worth it and perhaps that is the secret to winning the repeating all out war that has destroyed so many empires before the current Western one which is so much the New Rome and so much the old one.. 
But now its Sunday Morning and there are things I want to say, that will have to remain unsaid.

MATHEMATICS WITHOUT DIMENSION: Non-linear time theory requires mathematics which deny dimension, at least as we experience them. The problem with existing multidimensional time and space-time theories, which gives the same results in some cases, is that they remain "dimensional". The difference is subtle and one of perspective. Multidimensional time, for example, presumes space and forces of space with or without time and presumes time as an absolute linear quantity, albeit with more than one coordinate set.
Time ravels one way or the other and forces are created or combine. Whether this is what is viewed in traditional physics as matter/anti matter reactions remains to be determined. We can solve this for what we know:
Integration of point equations (point time states) envisions something along these lines: P(d1-f1, d2-f2,d3-f3,d4-f4 etc)dt.  In this equation each d represents a quantum change in dimension each F a corresponding force.  For this case, we'll look at d4+f4 being that form of time dimension capable of “spin”, the name given to dimension having standard clock time and what we call matter.  F is the corresponding force (photon, gravity, electromagnetic forces, standard clock time), here possibly the weak and strong atomic forces.
All of these start at zero, d1=f1, d2=f2, etc. and all are conserved as far as we can tell from those observed.
There are permutations that will complicate this, but for purposes of this solution we are going to ignore these (One permutation would be, for example, N(neutron)=P(proton+electron).
So let's take one of these equations that we understand, the rotational to non-rotational.  I.E. E=mc^2 where c=m/t and energy acceleration is m/t^2. E=mc^2 instead of mc because acceleration is the change of rate over time.
If we define the transition from energy to the rotational dimension (in this example d3-f3 to d4-f4) several things are apparent from this solution.  First we know that clock time has a value =mc^2 since clock time is the aspect of time, the force of CT4 which is watch time (SCT) in this case, that comes into existence with this transition.  

If compression is "consistent" the transition from d2-f2 to d3-f3 is along the same power of compression which is a “scale” of c^2. NLT rejects a consistent scale in prior and subsequent compression. Hence we talk in terms of conserving time, exchanging rates between one Clock Time and another.  However we also have exponential changes in compression rates.  it is therefor possible that we have a decrease in rate change or even a proportionately greater increase in rate change subject to the same exponential factors seen for compression (10^2, 10^4, 10^8, etc).

No comments:

Post a Comment