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| Posted by
Samuel A. (Sam) Cox on January 17, 2005 at 11:49:59 (Message posted from "unknown" at 68.45.160.182) - explanation In Reply to: "Re: How much of the total universe can we see ???" posted by imperial_black on January 16, 2005 at 17:38:15
In the study of General Relativity, time is considered spacelike, which means it is mathematically handled like length, width and height. This makes everything and every event in the universe static...everything has a certain coordinate. Einstein conceived the universe as static and created the cosmological constant to keep it so, since in 4D, relativity didn't quite work out as static. With Hubbles discoveries, Einstein was convinced he made a mistake assuming a static universe. The accelerating universe points to higher dimensionality, but Einstein and others found that the universe would not form particles in higher D. However, two three spaces containing matter and antimatter in superposition solves the dilema...two 4D universes on a single time process as per the work of Karl Schwarzschild. If we observe time as different from the other dimensions, we have to assume it is different, however, to understand time we have to conceptualize it in other ways than the way we experience it. The math requires this too. Everything points to the universes being a construct. That is where life comes in of course, bringing it into existence by observing and modifying it. |
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