This in another long and tortured section re-written to contain up to date, what shall I call them, musings? Theories?
3) CT(3) goes linear: If there is a time, that is a point along the algorithm solution (which we call a point along the spiral) where ct3 going linear happens for the first time, it is possible. A spiral, then another that forms a right angle and this third spiral may (mathematically) come off of the primary spiral or off of the secondary spiral. The visual 3 dimensional universe that we experience suggests the former, that is, two spirals coming off of the same “thread” of the primary spiral. It appears, from a modeling standpoint that these two spirals “spiral” around the central thread possibly coming back to it if “decompression,” e.g. nuclear fission (vs fusion which is compression), occurs.
I started this two days ago, but have been deathly ill with dizziness (not really deathly, but miserable).
I think its a combination of lack of sleep and the heat. The heat has broken somewhat, the sleep will never come again. Even this morning I was out working even as the world did its rocking horse moves on my inner ears. Maybe its swimming too. I should cut back on swimming, but it is so frigging hot. It cools me off. It gives me time to think while I burn off frustration. That, of course, cannot help my inner ear.
Then there is food. I've been eating all manner of food. Where are those healthy meals we once shared, where is that sleep punctuated only by the assurances that you remained next to me (not that you were always there, you were also sleepless, drifting around at night like some ethereal spirit, too beautiful to be of the earth, even at night.)
Then there is my vision, eyesight which seems to be as erratic as my sense of balance.
Then there is my vision, eyesight which seems to be as erratic as my sense of balance.
I've only been through half of this section, but this morning neither my memory, my eyes nor my sense of balance allow me to continue..
This isn't a mystery novel, and it is probably hard to digest in big pieces. This will be important later,so for the moment....
3) CT(3) goes linear: If there is a time, that is a point along the algorithm solution (which we call a point along the spiral) where ct3 going linear happens for the first time, it is possible. A spiral, then another that forms a right angle and this third spiral may (mathematically) come off of the primary spiral or off of the secondary spiral. The visual 3 dimensional universe that we experience suggests the former, that is, two spirals coming off of the same “thread” of the primary spiral. It appears, from a modeling standpoint that these two spirals “spiral” around the central thread possibly coming back to it if “decompression,” e.g. nuclear fission (vs fusion which is compression), occurs.
This suggests that when the secondary spirals come in to the primary spiral a multitude of new lines must come off (not as space, necessarily for reasons that will be clear from a consideration of what is occurring, but certainly space seems to be generated in explosions between otherwise compressed spirals. In fact, you see at the final spiral down this type of outward spreading lines to get back to the point of the origin of linearity, but all we see of it, is energy and the creation of the space remains shrouded except in the presence of gravity and its effects. The length (distance or time being the same) of the transition and its perceived limits are calculable accurately only using the ideas behind the spiral equation that gives both life and death to the universe, to the extent something stagnant can have both life and death. While I will not in this chapter attempt to run the equations of linearity, tracing the movement of the outermost energies in a trajectory using the spiral equation to the point where the minimum length exists yields a framework for this calculation and also for the speed with which compression of “dark matter space” to energy and matter occurs.
*The following comes largely from the post: NLC-spirals Archimedes and logarithmic; fibrucci series part 1.*
Light speed, if the distance from the point of origin is taken into account, defines how far photonic energy has traveled, the first light being from the first compression states. Because photonic forces would be generated from the first compression states, light would follow immediately upon the full “decompression of the spiral and the very first steps of compression. Each movement along the spiral results in a single photon being generated. If, as speculated here, there are spiral threads corresponding to each point in space (when all the information in the universe is uncompressed) then each movement inward of each of these points in space would result in one photon of light. However, if each movement only results in a single point of compression for all of the time threads, then each quantum moment would result in one photon of light.
What we would have to see initially is large amounts of the conversion of space to light. Estimating (below) that each quantum moment is an “instant” equal to 1.07x10^39th of a second, the the light generated at this early stage of the universe (presumably from a coordinate state at the very center of our universe, equal to 1.07x10^39 photons every second and this “energy” generation would remain constant throughout the universe until today. The “dark energy” represented by this transition eventually gets replaced by more observable phenomena which is the higher states of compression.
The spontaneous conversion of space to photonic energy is not observed, but at the early stages of the universe huge quantities of information had to be so converted and it is, perhaps continuing at the center of the universe. Whether conditions can be reproduced at a higher spiral state, that is whether we can do this in a laboratory, remains to be seen. While the spontaneous creation of light is given “god-like” attributes, basic theory shows it to be what we’d consider a low compression (1 to 2) transition, the fact is that very little light would be generated by a single transition (one photon of light, presumable) and this might go unnoticed in light of other compression states which are ongoing.
Another suggestion is that light may only compress from space at very high compression states (ctx-1, for example where x is total compression). This is beginning to sound very familiar, of course, in both recent steady state universe models and 5,000 year old religious models. However, the methodology of reaching the same place is a little different. In this model, the algorithm expressing the singularity shows that at a compression state of x-1, the remaining space has begun to collapse into the highly concentrated high compression states and suddenly can convert directly to photonic energy and you have, of course, a very bright, highly concentrated conversion of space to light. Where then does the remaining space come from to form the new universe? One suggestion is that it comes from the very high concentration non-space portion so that these portions (the space and the high clock time states) exchange places.
Light speed is not a true speed limit since there is no actual change in the universe. Instead, it reflects the amount of change in a single direction from one quantum moment to the next. We experience a large amount of this change directly in the spin of the earth, the solar system, the galaxy, the universe itself. The remainder of the change (always in one direction) must come from spin or some other hard to observe change. Spin might be a very gradual spiral, so gradual as to match the higher time states life span.
In this way, the spin can be seen as the visible representation of the higher compression spirals that are required to make up matter. If you think about it, it can send chills up your spine, well, perhaps not.
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