Tuesday, July 24, 2012

The Eleven Dimensions of Space/Time - Part I

I offer the following material as a metaphysical exposition of the basic dimensions defining space/time as we touch it. Note that the amount of dimensions here is the same as in what is known in theoretical physics as "M-Theory".

primary (defines a line, the selfsame line is a coordinate axis, the center of which is the Infinite Point) secondary (defines a plane, coordinate axis is at right angles to the primary, this axis bisecting the customary at the Infinite Point) tertiary (defines the volumetric space of the sphere, coordinate axis of which is a direction at right angles to both the customary and the secondary, and bisecting them both at the Infinite Point) time (defines directions at right angles to the primary, secondary, and tertiary; can be modeled as the exterior of the sphere, the center of which is the center of the sphere, the Infinite Point) movement of customary (rotation of the customary axis by degrees around the sphere, over time. The line rotates with the Infinite Point being the pivot upon which the rotation occurs, and is modeled plainly as the rotation of a line within a plane section.) movement of secondary (rotation of the secondary axis by degrees around the sphere, over time; together with the primary, can be modeled plainly as the rotation of a plane section within the sphere, with the customary axis line as the pivot around which the rotation occurs.) movement of tertiary (rotation of the tertiary axis by degrees around the sphere, over time; together with customary and secondary, can be modeled plainly as the rotation of a round form relative to a starting, or reference, position, with the center of the sphere as the pivot around which the rotation occurs.) pulse of time (expansion/contraction of time, modeled as the oscillation of the exterior of the sphere in a direction at right angles to the surface; round expansion represents energetic radiation in the following three dimensions while round contraction represents energetic absorption.) energetic radiation/absorption along customary (oscillation along the line over time; can be modeled as a pair of points on the line, one on each side of the center, arresting with equivalent but varying spacing between each of them and the center point. Note that dissimilar pairs of points can be arresting at dissimilar "times" or frequencies along this axis.) energetic radiation/absorption along secondary (with primary, is oscillation on the plane over time; simple example can be modeled as a shrinking or increasing circle on the plane) energetic radiation/absorption along tertiary (with customary and secondary, is oscillation within the volumetric space of the sphere, over time, simple example can be modeled as a shrinking or increasing bubble or subsphere)

Time

All eleven dimensions have a common center; that is, the center of the line, the plane, and the sphere are the same, as is true with the subsequent dimensions. Time transforms the static into the dynamic, which is one conjecture for labeling it a transformation dimension. Time enables spatial movement (rotation) of the first three dimensions; this movement is measured along dimensions five, six, and seven. (continued in Part Ii)

The Eleven Dimensions of Space/Time - Part I

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