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Saturday, October 25, 2014

NLT-just how many time coordinates are there?

I'm in sort of my angry mood today (you probably couldn't tell) so you'll have to excuse the references to the physics cabal as a pod of walruses.  In fact, I've already said everything that needs to be said on this issue (outside of the cave in some remote location); but since I know the walrus previously known as Gavin is hopping up and down on his overstuffed chair saying in his affected stuffy english accent  "I got it right, I got it right with my multi-dimensional time, on please Huffington post call me" and while I'm sure the editors of the huffington post are dialing his number as we speak, that is not right, it's just another physics walrus, wrong turn.
Ok, so you ask, what is the problem with multi-dimensional time?  The answer to that question lies in the question as to just how many coordinates are there, how many "time dimensions?" in the words of the bowler wearing walrus cabal.
Those of you who have read the book, already know the answer to this question.  We know that we actually see at least 5 changing at once.  "So there must be more than five." says the walrus with the effected English accent.  Wrong again.  Read the book.
In a "point universe," an "NLT universe," how many dimensions are there to change?"  Well, there aren't any, because its a point universe.  But if you have change, its only in the point, and there is just one point, so there is just one coordinate that can change.
And because this one coordinate, this one point, isn't worried about what the walrus is clinging to as time, it can change "simultaneously" as many times as it wants.
The more times that it changes simultaneous at once, the higher the concentration state.
Before CT5 (black holes) states were identified, it was possible that the universe had a defined size.  CT5 indicates something different, it suggests all the black holes in the universe are CT5 states and together the entire universe may be as little as a single CT5 atom, or molecule and that, in high enough concentrations (10^64) there are CT6 states.  To those, we would be nothing more that a quark or a force, perhaps a quark of a quark.  We would be as nearly dimensionless as a photon is to us.   And it remains possible, that there are clock times where even more coordinates are changing at once in ever higher concentrations, perhaps without number, all arising from a single point of dimensionless time.
And yet we sit here pondering on our mundane, walrus problems, worrying about what the other walruses are thinking, writing on our walrus blogs, chewing on our mustachios and wondering how we look in our bowlers.



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