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Saturday, February 20, 2016

NLC-why everything you knew about the universe is wrong

While the idea of a steady-state, quantum, stop animation universe is pretty huuuge (or yuuuge) to use the political vernacular, perhaps the biggest advance in understanding  the universe from NLC comes from fixing an early problem with NLT.  Under NLT ct0 went linear, then ct1, ct2, etc.  It was trapped in the idea of an expanding universe thanks to those vapid pre-NLC theories that said that the universe started with a "big bang."  I cannot emphasis enough how stupid that was.  It was only recently, really shortly before the spiral in amber was published, that it suddenly became obvious that there were multiple big-bangs and that the big bang was quite different than what was envisioned.
In editing the very rough draft of NLC (a spiral in amber) it can be seen this crazy misconception remains in dark shadows on what is otherwise a pretty fair, but very rough draft.
No, that whole big bang foolishness really screws up the theory.
The crazy idea that inspired this wrong view of "the 'closest' big bang" that the universe expands along the line that our view of time follows in the fixed spiral universe because of successive clock times going linear is actually the "opposite" of what is clearly shown by the compression model which shows a fully expanded ct1  universe of all space compressing and therefore shrinking from a completely unorganized state to a completely compressed and synchronized state, the opposite of what we'd see in a pre NLC explosion.

You're all wrong, big bang scientists, one day you'll figure it out. Empty space, the biggest state, shown as CT1 is the most outward of the spirals, the more the spirals pile up and overlap, the more you get to where we are, the 5th or 6th big bang in from the fully expanded state.

You're all wrong, only I, only me, am right.  Or so I believe I have shown.  So look at the model, look at the most outer, largerst spiral and follow it in, seeing each spiral come in as a step closer to full compression, but also note that the theory see at least 170 compression steps (see the book and the series shown in earlier posts) and we are only 6 spirals in, much further out than this model shows, and each spiral inward has its collision of the two intersecting spirals and each is a big bang.

Take that and stuff it in your nobel prizes.

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