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| Posted by
Samuel A. (Sam) Cox on January 17, 2005 at 19:39:01 (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 RingoKid on January 17, 2005 at 12:11:49
Especially when we start attempting to concepualize stuff like this, we use phenomena like bubbles and balloons. One of the problems is that the universe we observe can be presumed, because of the way it behaves, to consist of 4D projections of a higher dimensional construction. Hence, the bubbles burst as do the balloons, while in the real universe everything accelerates outward toward where it came from in the first place. Remember, when we look outward in space, we feel that the universe is larger the farther outward we go. Actually the universe gets samller! We look outward toward the big bang, a white hole which originated in a cosmic singularity everywhere. When we see the universe accelerating outward, it isn't exploding uphill, it is accelerating downhill, back toward singularity. These seemingly incongruous observations prove that our 4D frame is a lower dimensional projection of at least a foundational 7D system. One other important thing. The purpose of cosmic models is to explain the universe the way we observe it. The 7D, or any other model is only useful insofar as it explains the universe we live in as we carefully measure it...it must be verified in the cyclotron and with the telescope. Nevertheless, as you imply, our 4D particulate world existng in cosmological time is loaded with clues about its true nature. |
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