Wednesday, October 24, 2007
History, Knowledge, and Deja Vu
A time space plot is a 4-dimensional graph representing our path through time and space since the day we were born. Each axis on the graph are at 90 degree right angles to each other. The time axis is usually chosen to be the vertical axis and the 3 spacial axises are all 90 degrees to the time axis as well as each other. Two light cones are centered around the time axis in order to represent past and future. The upward facing cone represents the future and the downward facing cone represents the past. The point connecting the two cones is the present. All events in the future exist within the upward facing light cone and all events from the past exist within the downward facing light cone. By convention, most graphs use light cones with a 45 degree angle between the axis for distance in time and the axises for distance in space. Within these two cones a line can be drawn showing our path through time and space. This line is known as a 'world line'.
The time space plot traces out our movement through time and space. Aatucagg uses the same type of plot with a few alterations to trace out human thought. This type of plot is known as the plot of Aatucagg. Events are composed of information transmitted by gravity and light. Light must always travel at a constant speed and gravity can travel at speeds slower than, equal to, or faster than light. On a time space plot information carried by light always falls along the boundary of the light cone. The same event that produced light will also produce gravity. If gravity from this event travels slower than light then the gravitational portion of the event will reside inside the light cone. If gravity from this event travels at the same speed as light then the gravitational portion of the event will share the same point as the light portion of the event on the boundary of the light cone. If gravity from this event travels faster than light then the gravitational portion of the event will reside outside the light cone. Light reaching an observer before gravity from an event creates consciousness. Light reaching an observer at the same instant as gravity from an event creates deja vu. Light reaching an observer after gravity from the same event creates unconsciousness. About 2/3 of memory are conscious because consciousness is carried by light and we remain conscious about 16 hours a day, and 1/3 of memory are unconscious because unconsciousness is carried by gravity and we remain unconscious about 8 hours a day. The angle of the light cone with the spacial dimensions is 30 degrees to represent the fact that 2/3 of our lives are spent in a conscious state and 1/3 of our lives are spent in an unconscious state. Every once in a while gravity will travel at the speed of light, causing both conscious and unconscious information to reach the observer at the same time, resulting in a state of deja vu. When light arrives before gravity, then history is created before knowledge. History that is created before knowledge is what we refer to as real. When gravity arrives before light, then knowledge is created before history. Knowledge that is created before history is what we refer to as a unreal. Unreal information are dreams. We close our eyes at night to block out the light so we can create dreams from gravity. When light arrives at the same time as gravity, then history and knowledge are created at the same time. History that is created at the same time as knowledge is what we refer to as deja vu, creating the illusion of having previously experienced something actually being encountered for the first time. Any event inside the light cone will result in consciousness, any event on the boundary of the light cone will result in deja vu. Any event outside the light cone will result in unconsciousness.
Instead of a single point on the plot to represent an event, The plot of Aatucagg uses two points to represent a single event. One point represents the spacial component of the event transmitted by light and the other point represents the temporal component of the event transmitted by gravity. The spacial component will always be plotted on the boundary of the light cone since the spacial component of the event will always be transmitted at the speed of light. The temporal component will always be plotted above, below, or coincident to the spacial component, since the temporal component of the event will be transmitted at the speed of gravity, which is independent of the speed of light. The distance in time between the spacial event and temporal event on the plot is an indication of how much information will be available about the event as a whole at one time. If gravity arrives long before light does from an event then most of the conscious information will be lost. If light arrives long before gravity does from an event, then most of the unconscious information will be lost. Events that produce light and gravity of different speeds will produce less information than light and gravity of similar speeds, since light and gravity were unable to align in the present and produce history and knowledge at the same time. Maximum information occurs when both light and gravity arrive at the observer at the same time from an event. Since maximum information also occurs when spacial energy is equal to temporal energy, then when spacial energy equals temporal energy the speed of gravity will equal the speed of light. When light and gravity are converted into history and knowledge respectively at different times, then the observer is in misalignment with the event. When light and gravity are converted into history and knowledge at the same time then the observer is in alignment with the event. The more aligned an observer is with the event the more information the observer will retain about the event.
IMAGE LINKS:
Plot of Aatucagg
VIDEO LINKS:
History, Knowledge, and Deja Vu
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment