View Single Post
TinyTree
Blue Belt

TinyTree's Avatar

Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 132
14 TinyTree has a spectacular aura about
Quote  
02-06-2006, 09:54 AM
Quote:
Why is this so crucial in our analysis? Simply because an entanglement or coupling will “produce” or “modulate” a quantum with “two realities” spinning around a center of mass!

Yes, Sr.! Imagine an onion for a second! Let’s assume for a moment that a layer with X magnitude of energy inside a given reality would be wrapped into another layer with different energy and rate of reality. A hybrid would then be borne with one thing in common: the energy and the mass of one-electron. Of course, we are assuming all that based in what I’ve just said a moment ago about the symmetry of every particle with respect to the condition of their own origin.


So you are suggesting that each atom exists within its own reality, which is then coupled with other realities and it interacts with other atomic entities?

This is an interesting idea. It reminds me of the idea of a single particle in existence for the entire universe, which keeps zipping backwards and forwards in time. Thus, the atom which makes up my fingernail is the same atom which makes up the edge of the cloud which is the same atom that makes up the ring of Saturn. (For simplicity, we assume that this atom can "transform" from proton to neutron and so forth").

This then means that your single atom, interacting with the other atom through the atomic bond- is interacting with itself in an alternate plane of existence (another time line for that same atom)

With regards to the symmetry of every particle with respect to its origin- if they are all the same particle, then they are all perfectly symmetric. The question then might become instead- if a particle has traversed the entire universe life span, and now is beginning again, where does it end up? For the same particle existing over and over would not necessarily have spatial symmetry with respect to the traversing of the universe time line. That is to say, it is not necessasarily true that the atom would walk through all atomic positions in a linear, or regular, way, like an assembly line worker knocking off pieces of furniture. It might though.

So if we imagine this particle walking through all possible realities, then the points at which it interacts with itself through chemical or atomic bonds are the points where these realities intersect and are merged into one.
Reply With Quote
TinyTree is offline
 
Payday Loan | McDonalds | Bankruptcy | Articles directory | Mobile Phone