| 9th degree Black Belt
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Join Date: Jan 2006 Rep Power: 26 | A Perspective of Absolute Perception... -
02-13-2007, 10:15 PM
This is a thought experiment only, or is it? How many of you have actually tried to go beyond the known and knowable reaches of all possible imagined universes' edges? Let's say you are granted the omniscient abilities of Q on Startrek. You have the abilities to do or imagine anything, and I mean anything. Now imagine a universal perspectival perception of your being, or "I" cognition, at a distance of a tG^tG years beyond the finite light cone of this known universe. A tG is to be interpreted as a trillion googols[a one with one hundred zeros after it]. Expand your mind to get your thinking around such a huge distance. At the same time, you are granted the ability of your perception being able to travel at a commensurable absolute velocity. Of course, this thought experiment will have to exist in the sub-quantum reality, since it exceeds all our known physical properties of physics. Now, where are you? What are you? Why is this imagination even possible? Is it useful?
First, IMO, this massive expanse of space must still be made of the infinite absolute sub-quantum substance, as even at this great distance, you still have not reached the edge of infinity. You are able to see, with your absolute vision abilities, the entire evolution of the big-bang universe, before and after, to this very day. What would you see? From such a theoretical perspective of absolute perception, IMO, the speed of light, for 13.7 billion years, from the big bang to now, would look like a small flicker of light, taking an instantaneous 13.7 billion years to cross the distance of one electron, or all of finiteness crossed, as though it were no more than an electron of time/distance, in real correspondence to our earth perspective. What would gravity look like? What would electricity look like? What would mass look like? How would you, being the omniscient, create the real universe, from this vantage point? Is this theoretical vantage point of perception of any real use to understanding the sub-quantum actions of our real universe, here from earth's perspectival perception? I think it is, in the fact of realizing our imagination has immense powers of envisioning the possibly real sub-quantum reality. Can we make any sense of true prime fundamental substances and motions from this unique perspective, through the many types of correspondence logics and maths we could use, or possibly dream up? Can we fully understand all the sub-quantum state changes of macro and micro phase spaces, required to build a finite universe, from the infinite substance? Can we define all this action rationally? Why does perspectival perception, even allow such exaggerations? How does one make sense of such a universe, that can be interpreted from such an exaggerated perspective? I say only from the critical thinking, learned by us, from the finite perspective, applied to the infinite and sub-quantum perspectives. And I further say, all the finite laws of physics and nature apply to the universe's entirety. If you don't think so, just try to make sense of the above singularity vision. Now, what do you think?
Regards,
Lloyd
p.s.
From the above, I have deduced the equivalence principle of mass and gravity___Mass is the total velocity density of all absolute substance/matter, measured___Gravity is also the total velocity density of all absolute substance/matter, measured___attracting. This can be proved by attaching a cesium controlled, atomatically and instantaneously accurate radio signaling scale, above a suspended atomic bomb___as it starts its fission to fusion process, just before explosion___it will increase in weight...
Since this is early intuitive reasoning, I may be wrong, but I don't think so... "To develop the skill of correct thinking is in the first place to learn what you have to disregard. In order to go on, you have to know what to leave out; this is the essence of effective thinking." Kurt Godel "Time and space are modes in which we think and not conditions in which we live." Albert Einstein "The uncertainty principle is an absolute, finite, universal constant." L.G. "The tick-tick-tick of the cesium atom is a sliding-time-scaler constant of all finite universal motion." L.G.
Last edited by Lloyd Gillespie : 02-17-2007 at 11:02 PM.
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