| Re: "Xeno's Paradox": revisited -
01-16-2008, 01:47 AM
Sarcasm will get you nowhere fast, RP. lol
I don't express myself as well as I would like to, so I look for a few folks to grasp the gist of the depiction in order to give me better ways of expressing it analogously.
My explanation was a semi-complicated version implying that point A and point B are the same point from what would be the absolute perspective of the absolute universe. So there is no need for the unquantized universe to traverse any distance to reach point B.
As depicted with the micro/telescope in message one of my thread, the largest objects can be observed as points from great distances. Likewise, there are two abstractive universal perspectives accompanied by an infinite number of localized perspectives requiring abstractive measures of scalar masses and motions to produce the reality observed via a relativistic means of processing potential information. |