| Science and the Universe Science, scientific theories, and how they impact our view of the world and existence. |
03-19-2007, 04:44 PM
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#1 (permalink)
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Holiday Spirit
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Earth
Posts: 2,198
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Time/Space, What is That Like?
"...just how we livin' within the hip life
Time, Space, no one is alike
Be you and just be you
Or be out, that's right..."
words of wisdom by Digable Planets
(____(____(_(_(_(____)__)_)__)_)__)_____)___)___)0 00
??????
An amorphous question is sitting somewhere in me. Excuse me while I go "hmmmm" and try to tease it out through the keyboard.
Is it possible to reality-shift? I suppose that quantum physics points to this somewhat, and that is interesting and all--particle/wave, wave/particle--yet I am more intuitive than scientific.
Is time unreal? Einstein said that time is an illusion:
"...for us physicists who believe, the separation between past, present, and future is only an illusion, although a convincing one."
Interesting to me also that he chose the word "believe." "...for us physcisits who believe," smacks of some sort of spiritual/relgious faith, no? Interesting detail, but that's not where I want to go.
"Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." Einstein again. If we take the genius at his word, or better yet if we realize for ourselves that reality is indeed a complicated, persistent, and subtly-wired illusion, what happens to us? Hey, could we be illusory, too? Could our egos be merely illusions, little fabrications of a cosmic giggle?
Whooooaaa. Hold on there a minute, Keanu. Does this mean we wake up inside the Matrix once again or what?
My specualtion is naw... it just means things is different than we woulda thunk a minute ago. Us/them? What? Me/you? Particle/wave? What? Where? Who?
How limited is our consciousness? Pretty limited, when you're stuck in your ego. But what happens if you can somehow (and that's the tricky part--how) bust out of that ego cocoon and blossom into the human beings? Beings? Yes, plural, beings.
Didn't Jesus say something about the fruit and the vine? And what if that is true, in a way? Maybe we are all fruit on the vine, and maybe again we are also the vine. I know, I know, for you die-hard Christians being the vine is Jesus's job. Alright, I'll give you that, and you can stop reading now.
For the rest of you heretics who believe that maybe, just maybe, Jesus's teachings are supressed by the concreteness of various church dogmas and Sunday-school social structures, you know what I'm getting at here?
That's good, because I don't. I mean, I do, sort of, but I'm also just allowing myself to "blah blah blah."
Let's shift back to the idea of the reality-shift. If time is not a fixed linear thing made strictly of points, maybe it too is more of a wave. A timewave? Then we could go surfing! We could even go underwater, swim to points unknown and resurface. And just as we are allowing ourselves to adjust our positions in time, could we also drastically adjust our position in space? Wormhole, anyone?
These are the speculative ramblings of an intuitive mind steeped in dreams, books, coffee, paint, and music. Originally I thought to post this in "Alternative" religions, then thought about philosophy (haha  pun intended), but ultimately what happened was that Einstein whispered in my ear something about science and the universe, Douglas Adams shouted "42!!", and Stephen Hawking wrote me a poem directing me to post this new thread in his science section.
What??
I dunno. Do you?
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03-19-2007, 05:00 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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in essence
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Oxfordshire uk
Posts: 859
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Are you tuned to my present three days since migrain Pathless?
- c -
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03-19-2007, 05:03 PM
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#3 (permalink)
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
LOL, Pathless--I'm trying to sort through all of this. I am not particularly good at stating ideas from a strictly scientific POV. (Yes, you may laugh--I laugh with you--hahahaha, InLove and science-hahahaha!  )
BUT, being one of those folks who often thinks that religious dogma can get in the way of spiritual and practical meaning of Sacred Texts and the mythos contained within them, I think I might be able to comment.
I like to "live in the moment". Some folks might think that means living for selfish motives. It does not, for me, and I suspect many, many others. What living in the moment can do is keep us from worrying about the future, inordinately dwelling on past mistakes, while focusing on the needs of right now. That does not mean we cannot study history and learn from it, and it does not keep us from attempting to wisely plan for the future. "In this moment" is where the past and future meet, and yes, it does seem to increase reality, in my opinion. It is not always easy to do, but I find that when I do it, I seem to see more clearly. Does this make sense to anyone?
InPeace,
InLove
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03-19-2007, 06:35 PM
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#4 (permalink)
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in essence
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Oxfordshire uk
Posts: 859
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
So this state of migrain releases........ you see in this state Pathless your words make perfect sense,in repetition yes, but the blah carries, so at this point instead of Ciel talking as Ciel talks I find myself beyond the barriers or boundaries of the past retoric.......... And moved by colour, predominately yellow. some colours contain, immerse, others manifest, spread outwards, no holding pattern, interaction through sunlight on subtle senses, sunlight through worm holes of change.
So what is it I'm attempting to put forward here,,,mmmmmm, subtle senses, forces of planetary colour, in or out of the paint box, cosmic or commodity and er..... time.
And is the moment colourless?
Sometimes yes and sometimes no. And always neutral.
I see the air of space, it is not empty though it is no-thing. It is vibrational pattern and frequency form.
I see incoming forces of cosmic colour mixing with emmissive planetary colour, conductores of life force and energy. Movement through time.
And the moment is timeless yet time moves.
- c -
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03-19-2007, 07:53 PM
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#5 (permalink)
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here and now
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,201
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pathless
Is it possible to reality-shift? I suppose that quantum physics points to this somewhat, and that is interesting and all--particle/wave, wave/particle--yet I am more intuitive than scientific.
Is time unreal? Einstein said that time is an illusion:
"...for us physicists who believe, the separation between past, present, and future is only an illusion, although a convincing one."
"Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." Einstein again. If we take the genius at his word, or better yet if we realize for ourselves that reality is indeed a complicated, persistent, and subtly-wired illusion, what happens to us? Hey, could we be illusory, too? Could our egos be merely illusions, little fabrications of a cosmic giggle?
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Hi,
Was Einstein saying that time is an illusion; or that the distinction between past present and future is an illusion? Einstein’s thoughts on time / space were presumably not unconnected with his respect for Buddhism, no?
Quote:
Let's shift back to the idea of the reality-shift. If time is not a fixed linear thing made strictly of points, maybe it too is more of a wave. A timewave? Then we could go surfing! We could even go underwater, swim to points unknown and resurface. And just as we are allowing ourselves to adjust our positions in time, could we also drastically adjust our position in space? Wormhole, anyone?
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Your blah blah blah is to be expected, it takes a great mind to enunciate the ineffable! My blah blah blah is that in moments of being present I have a vague sense of there being only the ever changing present moment. As space (and its contents) change we call this process time but the two are inextricably linked, the same even. Perhaps I should hand over to the experts…
"The Einsteinian notion of space-time, a continuum in which time represents the fourth dimension, was apparently anticipated by Dogen, for whom time was inseparable from “being”. Time, of course, can only exist within a context of space, since it is a function of movement. But since being, or put another way, consciousness, is self-identical with space, time itself is inseparable from being.
Dogen said: “So-called time of being means time is already being; all being is time…Self is arrayed as the whole world. You should perceive that each point, each thing of this whole world is an individual time.”
Shunryu Suzuki elaborates this point: “Moment after moment each one of us repeats this activity (of breathing). Here there is no idea of time and space. Time and space are one. We do things one after the other, that is all. At one o’clock you will eat your lunch. To eat lunch is itself one o’clock. You will be somewhere, but that place cannot be separated from one o’clock.” To create an idea of a place separate from one o’clock, as when we say “I wish I had gone somewhere else for lunch,” is playing mind-games, weaving illusion."
Spiritual Nirvana - Practical paths to Enlightenment » 5. Dogen and Einstein
s.
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03-19-2007, 08:04 PM
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#6 (permalink)
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here and now
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,201
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Quote:
Originally Posted by InLove
I like to "live in the moment". Some folks might think that means living for selfish motives. It does not, for me, and I suspect many, many others. What living in the moment can do is keep us from worrying about the future, inordinately dwelling on past mistakes, while focusing on the needs of right now. That does not mean we cannot study history and learn from it, and it does not keep us from attempting to wisely plan for the future. "In this moment" is where the past and future meet, and yes, it does seem to increase reality, in my opinion. It is not always easy to do, but I find that when I do it, I seem to see more clearly. Does this make sense to anyone?
InPeace,
InLove
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Hi,
I don't know InLove, every word of this just sounds like Buddhist clap trap.
s.
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03-19-2007, 08:06 PM
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#7 (permalink)
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Oh yeah???
Cool.
InPeace,
InLove
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03-19-2007, 08:08 PM
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#8 (permalink)
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here and now
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,201
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Quote:
Originally Posted by InLove
Oh yeah???
Cool.
InPeace,
InLove
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Steady, you don't know where it might lead!
s.
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03-19-2007, 08:10 PM
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#9 (permalink)
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Okay--I'll proceed with caution. Here's what I think, though--I will wind up in the moment wherever I am.
InPeace,
InLove
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03-19-2007, 08:20 PM
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#10 (permalink)
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 6,220
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Quote:
Originally Posted by InLove
Okay--I'll proceed with caution. Here's what I think, though--I will wind up in the moment wherever I am.
InPeace,
InLove
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Will you....how often have you not been where you were? Ie how often have your thoughts not been in the same time and space as your body.
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03-19-2007, 08:27 PM
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#11 (permalink)
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Quote:
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Originally Posted by wil
Will you....how often have you not been where you were? Ie how often have your thoughts not been in the same time and space as your body.
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Yeah, but I am talking about that which does not necessarily always include my body. 
InPeace,
InLove
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03-19-2007, 09:44 PM
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#12 (permalink)
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Holiday Spirit
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Earth
Posts: 2,198
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
I didn't start this thread intending to talk about mindfulness and living in the present moment, but okay. Y'all can roll with that if you want to. Living in the present moment is certainly crucial and difficult to do.
What I was hoping to get some feedback on was this idea of reality-surfing, or changing our positions within timespace. I'm not talking about teleportation or time-travel back to ogle at the dinosaurs, although if someone wants to talk about that stuff, that's cool, too.
What I'm interested in is more along the lines of parallel worlds. Imagine that there are uncountable streams of timespace which are ultimately connected, yet we, as individuals, are only able to inhabit one at a time. Or are we? I guess the first question is, assuming that multiple "realities" of timespace ("parallel worlds") exist, must not there be some way to travel from one to another? If so, how would we know if we had suddenly quantum leaped into another frame of timespace? Things would be different, perhaps, but things are changing all the time regardless...
I've also been playing with this idea that our individual egos are like limbs of some higher being (a god, if you will). We have some autonomy, but ultimately our actions are a reflection of this higher being or higher self, who may be playing us like a child plays with an action figure, kind of, except different. That analogy should serve alright, though. And this higher being/self is not only playing our individual egos, which are manifestations of it (the higher self), but also it is playing some unknown quantity of other individuals, too.
So this starts to sound a lot like the concept of Lila, divine play, found in "Hinduism." Yet where Lila is the divine play of a supreme creator, I'm envisioning something that is more like the divine play of our individual souls* of which our body/mind/spirit is only one manifestation among many.
Anyone following this hoo-ha? If so, and we assume that this soul/higher being is our guiding divine principle in life (again, basically a god), and we are one among many of its manifestations, then in one sense we have a whole slew of "other lives" in "parallel worlds" that are intimately connected to ours, and that we are completely unaware of.
Alright, well, that's enough of that. Time for a walk.
*which in turn are limbs of the supreme creator, who in turn is a thought bubble of another supreme creator, and on and on and on and on...
Peace,
Pathless
Oh and....
Quote:
Originally Posted by Snoopy
Was Einstein saying that time is an illusion; or that the distinction between past present and future is an illusion? .
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What's the difference? Semantics?
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03-19-2007, 10:07 PM
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#13 (permalink)
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 6,220
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
I think we are operating in other universes and other times. But we can't really entertain more than one thought at once currently and therefor can't see our lives at the other times or in the other locations.
Some of us appear to have the ability to remember some of our past or our future or our other aspects...however we typically don't think much of those that do.
Sure we often allow some certain bit of 'fantasy' but if one goes into an ongoing state of talking to G-d or about past lives...well that is just another situation all together...
So maybe there is a reason that in this plane and at this time our abilities have a governor on them?
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03-19-2007, 10:19 PM
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#14 (permalink)
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in essence
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Oxfordshire uk
Posts: 859
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
So maybe thats it.
The consensus is the appreciation of the moment.
Because at this time there is a realisation time space is thought space.
A life time of interdimensional travel is nothing compared to the ultimate human space the moment brings.
- c -
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03-20-2007, 06:05 AM
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#15 (permalink)
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 8,429
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Re: Time/Space, What is That Like?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ciel
So maybe thats it.
The consensus is the appreciation of the moment.
Because at this time there is a realisation time space is thought space.
A life time of interdimensional travel is nothing compared to the ultimate human space the moment brings.
- c -
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Apparently it is possible to "phase shift". Same space, different time, same time different space.
Consider the poor photon. The only thing man has gotten to move so fast through space, that it can arrive in time to see itself depart...though not fast enough to be at the same moment in time and space as it was (that might be quite devastating to us all). Of course this is all based on our limited understanding of time and space (and gravity).
Time is afterall a "frequency", as is space (more or less). Example: I can bring a ship's generator on line (which will handle the load), but it works rather laboriously if everyone is doing everything requiring electricity, all at once. But I can bring a second generator online and split the load between the two (one handles half and the other, the other half), of the demand.
But what if I can syncronize the output of the energy of the two generators to the same specifications? Why, I can literally "parallel" them up! Indeed, I can theoretcially bring a third generator into phase with the other two and triple the power at one third the load to each (hard to do, but possible).
Now the two physical generators do not occupy the same space at the same time, but the output of energy they produce does. It is called being "in phase". The result is twice the power at half the load for each generator, with a very stable frequency for the recipients of that energy. The energy frequencies are identical in time, and run along the same pathway (space) at the same instant. (for those who have ever been on a boat with two engines running at the same time at high speed, every once in awhile the sound of the two engines seems to mesh into one for a bit...they sound like one engine-that is sound energy approaching the same frequency at the same time, in the same space, then they lose sycnronization and harmonics, and you hear two distinct engines). ok, back to my original point -
However, if one generator falls out of phase with the other, then the frequencies of the energies stop running in parallel, and indeed "collide" with eachother...and that can make for a very destructive result. That is called, being out of phase. It is an electrician's bane. It can cause all kind of electrical failures and destroy lots of stuff very quickly (including one generator or both).
So, to be out of phase but in the same space is not good. To be in phase and in the same space is great, but touchy to keep. To be out of phase and not in the same space is isolation and irrelevant (from a physics perspective).
How am I doing so far?
oops, forgot - to be in phase (in time), but not in the same space...what would that be? Two engines, who's harmonics come together for a time? No. Reality is that two objects in phase in time but not in the same space can be used for great creativity, or astounding disruption...consider the walls of Jericho -
Last edited by Quahom1; 03-20-2007 at 06:20 AM.
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