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| Posted by
Samuel A. (Sam) Cox on January 19, 2005 at 12:51:22 (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 18, 2005 at 13:38:08
From our frame, the more distant astronomical universe is actually accelerating away from us. The microscopic particulate universe we observe seems suspended at the cosmic Planck length event horizon- and seems stable. You are correct. This results from the way we observe a universe which exists in some kind of spherical geometry. Because of the universes duality, we remotely observe the collapse of the matter, 4D particulate universe in GR time dilation. This freezes everything and makes the proton stable for (almost) cosmological time. How can this happen? Because the antimatter side, which exists on the other side of time, and from which we observe material reality, is in an imprtant sense, right here! This is made possible by the nature of light, which as a kind of matrix, mathematically and in reality is everywhere at once. The photons coming out of your houselamp are part of the same matrix emerging from houselamps on the other side of the universe. This makes it possible for us to cross view the unniverse and see the collapsing reality we experience in time dilation. The vastness of the universe which we observe from our frame is little more than a complex holographic construct. Because motion and change (time) exists in the universe (a consequence of its finitude), at death we simply lose our frame, and then repeat the process of observing from our frame over and over- forever. The study of horizons etc can obscure the primary reality about the universe...it is in fact very small....all information is tightly packed and inter-related...and it is created by the very unique way we observe it. It is a rapid, everywhere, proper time pulse, which we read a very special way in time dilation, cosmologically. |
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