View Full Version : The Value of nothing is everything


Quantum Quack
06-04-06, 10:45 AM
If everything is in some kind of relationship with everything only then can nothing- ness not exist.

That nothing ness is a default result of everything being in a relationship with everything.

For example : A fly has a relationship with a star on the other side of the universe.

Every existant "thing" could be stated as being in a relationship with every existant thing. It is only when this is so, nothing- ness no-exists by default.

Thus the value of nothing is everything.

Care to discuss?

nicholas1M7
06-04-06, 12:17 PM
If everything is in some kind of relationship with everything only then can nothing- ness not exist.

That nothing ness is a default result of everything being in a relationship with everything.

For example : A fly has a relationship with a star on the other side of the universe.

Every existant "thing" could be stated as being in a relationship with every existant thing. It is only when this is so, nothing- ness no-exists by default.

Thus the value of nothing is everything.

Care to discuss?


Is value the right word? Or definition?

TruthSeeker
06-04-06, 01:36 PM
If everything is in some kind of relationship with everything only then can nothing- ness not exist.
Maybe nothing-ness by definition is something which has no relationship with anything else? :confused:

How can nothingness has any relationship with something?

That nothing ness is a default result of everything being in a relationship with everything.
How does that follow?

For example : A fly has a relationship with a star on the other side of the universe.

Every existant "thing" could be stated as being in a relationship with every existant thing.
Yes. At least indirectly.

It is only when this is so, nothing- ness no-exists by default.
How does that follow? What do you mean by "no-exists"?

Thus the value of nothing is everything.
What does value has anything to do with this discussion?

Winner of Discontent
06-04-06, 02:31 PM
how can everything have a relationship with everything else? so there is a force in the universe that ties everything together in some form of harmony to counter nothingness? sounds suspiciously like the seven degrees of kevin bacon game.

the way i am reading this is that nothingness is the default of everything being in a relationship with everything else yet only once everything is in a relationship with everything else will nothingness no longer be the default. seems contradictory.

and yes, a definition of nothingness or how you interpret it is somewhat integral to understand this post. to me, nothingness is merely a feeling...not a force. i don't believe i am tied to anything in the universe. when i die, it will go on without me unaware that i was ever here.

not sure i've understood what you mean...i have embraced my nothingness for too long probably. tho i will say, atm the value of nothing is everything to me.

TruthSeeker
06-04-06, 03:02 PM
how can everything have a relationship with everything else? so there is a force in the universe that ties everything together in some form of harmony to counter nothingness? sounds suspiciously like the seven degrees of kevin bacon game.
At least indirectly, yes (besides the nothingness par- that's debatable).

nicholas1M7
06-04-06, 05:57 PM
Maybe nothing-ness by definition is something which has no relationship with anything else? :confused:

How can nothingness has any relationship with something?


How does that follow?


Yes. At least indirectly.


How does that follow? What do you mean by "no-exists"?


What does value has anything to do with this discussion?


TruthSeeker,

what he is saying is that IF everything is related to each and every thing else, then and only then can nothing not exist (i.e. there would be no such thing as nothing, it would be meaningless to speak of such). However, if not each and every thing in existence were related, i.e. if two things in the universe could be said to be truly unrelated, then nothingness is a possibility somewhere, anywhere in the universe. Hence, this everything relationship is what gives meaning to the word nothing.

RoyLennigan
06-04-06, 06:44 PM
the human concept of nothingness is decieving. what we percieve as nothing is really uniformity of a whole. we see complete blackness when really there is a minute difference that our senses are too limited to pick up on. we see a white paper when it is really just a repeating pattern of the same kinds of molecules. therefore i think nothing is just a misconcieved perception of everything as a whole.

everything is related somehow and every tiny event affects every other tiny event in some way. so it could be said that there can be no distinction between anything and that we are all part of one big thing--the universe.

Quantum Quack
06-04-06, 08:28 PM
TruthSeeker,

what he is saying is that IF everything is related to each and every thing else, then and only then can nothing not exist (i.e. there would be no such thing as nothing, it would be meaningless to speak of such). However, if not each and every thing in existence were related, i.e. if two things in the universe could be said to be truly unrelated, then nothingness is a possibility somewhere, anywhere in the universe. Hence, this everything relationship is what gives meaning to the word nothing.
Nicholas1M7 I think has understood the logic I am proposing with this thread.
It is a little difficult to get the 'ole head around I guess.
I'll post more later....gotta run...

TruthSeeker
06-05-06, 11:08 PM
I see what is being said...
I'm not sure if it follows, however... :confused:

sisyphus__
06-06-06, 12:35 AM
yeah, hard to get the ol head around alright. i guess you just gotta pay attention! ;) beat your flippin foot up aganist a tree karatie chop!
verrrryyyy interesting QQ

TruthSeeker
06-06-06, 01:38 AM
How about some nicely laid out premises that follow into a conclusion? ;)

Quantum Quack
06-06-06, 02:37 AM
If everything is in some kind of relationship with everything only then can nothing- ness not exist.


Posted by Truthseeker:
Maybe nothing-ness by definition is something which has no relationship with anything else?

How can nothingness has any relationship with something?

I feel it would be prudent to clarify, stating with out any reservation that nothing-ness can not exist.

For if it exists it can no longer be classified as nothingness [ in absolutum ]

To extend it to the threads proposition:

For nothing- ness to not exist [ no-exist ~ a new word...hmmmm] everything else must exist.

And to do so everything must be in an existant relationship in that if one thing exists then another thing does also. That is to say that they share a relationship of existing [ simplified approach]

If one assumes that every thing come to be at some starting point then everything in existance has it's origins at that point. So therefore it could be said that a relationship must exist even if just a point of creation.

For example the matter that comprises my body is the same age and comes from the same soriginal source as yours or any body elses. There fore we share a relationship of origin.

So it could be stated clearly I feel that all exisistant "things" have a relationship with all existant "things"

It is only because of this relationship that nothing-ness can not exist.

if any "thing" has no relationship then nothingness could be said co-exist with somethingness.

And if nothingness exists then it can no longer be considered as nothingness in absolutum, because it now enjoys a relationship of co-existance.

So...nothingness can only not exist if everything has a relationship with everything.

The question I feel is how to prove that nothing-ness does not exist.

I tend to think that is we can prove that every "thing" is in a relationship with every "thing"* then we have proved nothing-ness's non-existance by default.
[* nothingness is not a "thing"]


“ Thus the value of nothing is everything. ”


What does value has anything to do with this discussion?

this is a bit harder to explain........hmmmm.....

a long the lines of "zero = infinity"....but I'll get back to this later..if I can.......

"sorry guys, I posted the thread with out having the time resources to put into the follow up... my mistake"

RoyLennigan
06-06-06, 10:17 AM
I feel it would be prudent to clarify, stating with out any reservation that nothing-ness can not exist.

For if it exists it can no longer be classified as nothingness [ in absolutum ]

To extend it to the threads proposition:

For nothing- ness to not exist [ no-exist ~ a new word...hmmmm] everything else must exist.

And to do so everything must be in an existant relationship in that if one thing exists then another thing does also. That is to say that they share a relationship of existing [ simplified approach]

If one assumes that every thing come to be at some starting point then everything in existance has it's origins at that point. So therefore it could be said that a relationship must exist even if just a point of creation.

For example the matter that comprises my body is the same age and comes from the same soriginal source as yours or any body elses. There fore we share a relationship of origin.

So it could be stated clearly I feel that all exisistant "things" have a relationship with all existant "things"

It is only because of this relationship that nothing-ness can not exist.

if any "thing" has no relationship then nothingness could be said co-exist with somethingness.

And if nothingness exists then it can no longer be considered as nothingness in absolutum, because it now enjoys a relationship of co-existance.

So...nothingness can only not exist if everything has a relationship with everything.

The question I feel is how to prove that nothing-ness does not exist.

I tend to think that is we can prove that every "thing" is in a relationship with every "thing"* then we have proved nothing-ness's non-existance by default.
[* nothingness is not a "thing"]




this is a bit harder to explain........hmmmm.....

a long the lines of "zero = infinity"....but I'll get back to this later..if I can.......

"sorry guys, I posted the thread with out having the time resources to put into the follow up... my mistake"
i say i would have to agree with you. i have come to the exact same conclusion independantly--that if everything exists in a relation to each other, then nothingness cannot exist. nothing includes a lack of relation, by definition, and so it cannot exist in a universe where all things affect each other.

but i would not say that the value of nothing is everthing. i think the misconcieved idea of nothing by humans has the value of everything. we see a blank wall and call it nothing, when in reality it is something that is uniform. but the value of an actual nothing would be undefined, like dividing by 0. the value of everything would be infinite.

TruthSeeker
06-06-06, 01:47 PM
What if a tree falls in a forest and nobody is around to perceive it. Is that nothingness? :D ;)

You may be interested in this thread as well...
http://www.sciforums.com/showthread.php?p=1062192#post1062192

c7ityi_
06-06-06, 02:05 PM
What if a tree falls in a forest and nobody is around to perceive it. Is that nothingness? :D ;)

there are always some atoms to 'perceive' the trees.

RoyLennigan
06-06-06, 03:55 PM
there are always some atoms to 'perceive' the trees.
exactly

TruthSeeker
06-06-06, 05:05 PM
So atoms have consciousness?

c7ityi_
06-06-06, 05:46 PM
So atoms have consciousness?

teehee... to us it seems like matter is dead because we're so much more alive/conscious. but you know that animals are alive, and even plants, and tiny microbes. why would there be a line between dead and alive somewhere? there is no line, but it's like with light... there are infinite colors... infinite different states of consciousness.

atoms don't have the ability to see things cuz they don't have eyes.. ;P but they still can "feel/experience" something, which is the reason why they are in motion. a magnet attracts metals and other magnets. it's a very primitive kind of love.

i mean... the experiencer and the experienced are not separated. if there is an experiencer, there is something to experience. if there is something to experience, there is an experiencer.

motion is not possible without consciousness.

the reason atoms start building human bodies and things is because there are tiny humans and animals also living in those [to us] microscopic worlds. they strive for the same things as we do. unification. surviving.

the universe is a giant living organism. imagine that this organism would be hurt, and it would damage our earth a little. the life on earth... humans... animals... plants... we would heal it.

that's the reason our wounds heal if we are hurt.

everything is alive. everything is you, in another form. one self, infinite bodies.

RoyLennigan
06-06-06, 07:41 PM
So atoms have consciousness?
no, but atoms are affected by sound.

TruthSeeker
06-06-06, 10:00 PM
We are talking about consciousness, here...

RoyLennigan
06-07-06, 12:35 AM
We are talking about consciousness, here...
i thought we were talking about cause and effect. if a tree falls in the forest, it still hits other things and lays on the ground, leaving evidence of its fall. it still sends shock waves out (vibration, same as sound). it still ultimately affects someone in some way and so somehow it is percieved... maybe not consciously, but it affects someone.

TruthSeeker
06-07-06, 12:41 AM
Not consciously? Then how do you know? ;)

Wilmet
06-07-06, 01:00 AM
If everything is in some kind of relationship with everything only then can nothing- ness not exist.

That nothing ness is a default result of everything being in a relationship with everything.

For example : A fly has a relationship with a star on the other side of the universe.

Every existant "thing" could be stated as being in a relationship with every existant thing. It is only when this is so, nothing- ness no-exists by default.

Thus the value of nothing is everything.

Care to discuss?

Hi Quack,

In the sense that I think everything has always existed in one form or another and will continue to exist in one form or another, I think that there is no true "nothing". The "nothings" that we speak of are just various empty sets (devoid of particular somethings) but the empty sets themselves are something.

nicholas1M7
06-07-06, 02:24 PM
If everything were in relationship, then and only then can nothing no-exist.

But it has been mathematically proven that an empty space can occupy infinity. However, there is still dubeity about matter.

If this is the case, then it supports an infinite universe. If not, then it supports the Big Bang. In a Big Bang all things would be in relation since all things originated from a single point in nothingness. Existence and nothingness would be distinct from each other. Which implies that to exist, we cannot cross the boundary of existence.

TruthSeeker
06-07-06, 02:37 PM
But it has been mathematically proven that an empty space can occupy infinity. However, there is still dubeity about matter.
Show it! ;)

Crunchy Cat
06-08-06, 12:44 AM
...
Thus the value of nothing is everything.

There might exist an asymptotic nothing (consider it for all intents and purposes '0') and because it can never actually be absolute nothing, sometimes it fractures into pieces (near-0 breaks into pieces that repel and interact with each other). Gotta love those false vaccums.

Absane
06-08-06, 01:22 AM
I do not actually understand what you are trying to discuss, but I get the gist of it.

I see the entire universe as a complex system in constant motion; every single thing has some relationship with everything else else, whether minute or on a large scale.

I can sense this complexity and even "see" it... I got to tell you, it drives me crazy. It is like trying to comprehend random nonsense with clarity. It really gets to me when I am driving, as my thoughts are all over the place and have a tendancy to come back to this idea.

Quantum Quack
06-08-06, 02:42 AM
Nicholas1M7:
“Is value the right word? Or definition?”

Truth Seeker:
“Maybe nothing-ness by definition is something which has no relationship with anything else?

How can nothingness have any relationship with something?”

Winner of Discontent:
“How can everything have a relationship with everything else? so there is a force in the universe that ties everything together in some form of harmony to counter nothingness? sounds suspiciously like the seven degrees of Kevin Bacon game.”

Roy Lennigan:
“The human concept of nothingness is deceiving. What we perceive as nothing is really uniformity of a whole. we see complete blackness when really there is a minute difference that our senses are too limited to pick up on. We see a white paper when it is really just a repeating pattern of the same kinds of molecules. There fore I think nothing is just a misconceived perception of everything as a whole.”

and

“….....that if everything exists in a relation to each other, then nothingness cannot exist.
but I would not say that the value of nothing is everything. I think the misconceived idea of nothing by humans has the value of everything. we see a blank wall and call it nothing, when in reality it is something that is uniform. but the value of an actual nothing would be undefined, like dividing by 0. the value of everything would be infinite.”

Wilmet:
“In the sense that I think everything has always existed in one form or another and will continue to exist in one form or another, I think that there is no true "nothing". The "nothings" that we speak of are just various empty sets (devoid of particular some-things) but the empty sets themselves are something.”

Nicholas1M7:
“Existence and nothingness would be distinct from each other. Which implies that to exist, we cannot cross the boundary of existence.”

Crunchy Cat:
“There might exist an asymptotic nothing (consider it for all intents and purposes '0') and because it can never actually be absolute nothing, sometimes it fractures into pieces (near-0 breaks into pieces that repel and interact with each other). Gotta love those false vacuums.”

Absane:
“I see the entire universe as a complex system in constant motion; every single thing has some relationship with everything else, whether minute or on a large scale.”

Ok.....the above shows you guys and others I haven't quoted are great thinkers.

So I'll put it to you regarding the value issue?

"Where did everything originate from?"

The suggestion is that if absolute nothing as described, and defined has the potential to be everything. In fact some would say that absolute nothing has become or is constantly "becoming" absolutely everything. premised on the assumption that the present ongoing moment is a continuation of that creation.

So if everything originates from nothingness, and we hold to this notion for a moment, would it be correct to extend this to defne the value of nothing as being everything?

"....just to stir things a little:"

And if one wishes to add a contraversial thought to this, one could suggest that "God" is this absolute nothingness. That the only thing that is common to everything is this Nothingness or "God"

Ok next question:

"When you are fully unconscious [ not dreaming ], what are you?"

" In science it is often mentioned that a light event which is central in time is of infinitely small duration. In other words a photon has a "rest" duration of an infinitely small or zero amount of time. Thus it can be concluded that the NOW is actually a moment of zero or infinitely small duration.[ disregarding Max Planck theories of Size and duration for the moment]

So would it not be reasonable to extend this to state that the NOW is a constantly evolving moment of creation originating from nothingness that only gains value because of temporal meaning gained by our perceptions? We remember what was before and what we think will be.....with out such memory we would not percieve anything. [ everything therefore is a temporal memory of a zero or infinitely small duration moment of creation. Whether that be a memory of past events or a memory of future anticipations]?"

TruthSeeker
06-08-06, 11:56 AM
"Where did everything originate from?"

The suggestion is that if absolute nothing as described, and defined has the potential to be everything. In fact some would say that absolute nothing has become or is constantly "becoming" absolutely everything. premised on the assumption that the present ongoing moment is a continuation of that creation.

So if everything originates from nothingness, and we hold to this notion for a moment, would it be correct to extend this to defne the value of nothing as being everything?

"....just to stir things a little:"

And if one wishes to add a contraversial thought to this, one could suggest that "God" is this absolute nothingness. That the only thing that is common to everything is this Nothingness or "God"
Do you consider nothingness to be the vaccuum in space or something even more empty? Because if you consider it to be more empty, then it is implied that nothingness, if existing, would exist only outside of the universe. then you cannot really equate nothingness to everything, and we also run into problems deriving the boundaries of the universe. How could you define nothingness "outside" the universe if you cannot perceive nothingness and it is beyond the boundaries of existance. But, yes, I suppose it exists if it is outside the universe, because that implies that there is no existance beyond the boundaries. A paradox? ;)

"When you are fully unconscious [ not dreaming ], what are you?"

" In science it is often mentioned that a light event which is central in time is of infinitely small duration. In other words a photon has a "rest" duration of an infinitely small or zero amount of time. Thus it can be concluded that the NOW is actually a moment of zero or infinitely small duration.[ disregarding Max Planck theories of Size and duration for the moment]

So would it not be reasonable to extend this to state that the NOW is a constantly evolving moment of creation originating from nothingness that only gains value because of temporal meaning gained by our perceptions? We remember what was before and what we think will be.....with out such memory we would not percieve anything. [ everything therefore is a temporal memory of a zero or infinitely small duration moment of creation. Whether that be a memory of past events or a memory of future anticipations]?"
Yes :)

Finity is just the way our brains interpret reality in order to process it. :D

Crunchy Cat
06-08-06, 02:31 PM
"Where did everything originate from?"

The suggestion is that if absolute nothing as described, and defined has the potential to be everything. In fact some would say that absolute nothing has become or is constantly "becoming" absolutely everything. premised on the assumption that the present ongoing moment is a continuation of that creation.

In all honesty, I can't conceive of an absolute nothing as there is no real or even hypothetical evidence that pure absence exists. Asymptotic nothing is a completely different thing. You can have a number 0.00000...00001. It looks like a zero, but it's not. Something is there.

As to where everything originates from, I wish I knew (I am rooting for M-Theory though). Inflationary theory (which is most applicable to this discussion) says that that outside our universe is an near-asymptotic nothing vaccum. I say near-asymptotic because the laws of physics (time included) are still in affect. Anyhow the laws of physics cause fluctuations (energy changes) in the asymptotic nothing vaccum and the most common result is a positive and negative construct popping up into existence for a brief moment (have to have both because of the conservation of energy). What occasionally happens is the creation of a false vaccum, in other words a tiny tiny tiny (billionth the size of a proton) patch of structure that has an outwardly repulsive force. The structure would be composed of gravity (negative energy) and matter (positive energy). The repulsive nature of the false vaccum would rapidly inflate it and generate more positive and negative energy along the way (hence filling the universe up). To simplify the concept, our universe might be flactuation in asymptotic nothingness that divided it into gravity and matter. In other words, matter + gravity = 0 (this is observable in the universe).


So if everything originates from nothingness, and we hold to this notion for a moment, would it be correct to extend this to defne the value of nothing as being everything?

If we're defining nothing as asymptotic nothing then the identity (for our universe specifically) might be:

asymptotic nothing = gravity + matter
something = (asymptotic nothing - matter) UNION (asymptotic nothing - gravity)


"When you are fully unconscious [ not dreaming ], what are you?"


A human whom is unconscious.


" In science it is often mentioned that a light event which is central in time is of infinitely small duration. In other words a photon has a "rest" duration of an infinitely small or zero amount of time. Thus it can be concluded that the NOW is actually a moment of zero or infinitely small duration.[ disregarding Max Planck theories of Size and duration for the moment]

So would it not be reasonable to extend this to state that the NOW is a constantly evolving moment of creation originating from nothingness that only gains value because of temporal meaning gained by our perceptions? We remember what was before and what we think will be.....with out such memory we would not percieve anything. [ everything therefore is a temporal memory of a zero or infinitely small duration moment of creation. Whether that be a memory of past events or a memory of future anticipations]?"

In the inflationary model, definately not. :)

sisyphus__
06-08-06, 09:17 PM
Not only can a human "be unconscious"; but humans are known to ... rather unknown, to be unknown...
as I like to say, sometimes "a human being can go down to any level that is possible to go down to";
I assume we're talkin humans here. Sorry, just my input..

Quantum Quack
06-09-06, 02:35 AM
In all honesty, I can't conceive of an absolute nothing as there is no real or even hypothetical evidence that pure absence exists. Asymptotic nothing is a completely different thing. You can have a number 0.00000...00001. It looks like a zero, but it's not. Something is there.

As to where everything originates from, I wish I knew (I am rooting for M-Theory though). Inflationary theory (which is most applicable to this discussion) says that that outside our universe is an near-asymptotic nothing vaccum. I say near-asymptotic because the laws of physics (time included) are still in affect. Anyhow the laws of physics cause fluctuations (energy changes) in the asymptotic nothing vaccum and the most common result is a positive and negative construct popping up into existence for a brief moment (have to have both because of the conservation of energy). What occasionally happens is the creation of a false vaccum, in other words a tiny tiny tiny (billionth the size of a proton) patch of structure that has an outwardly repulsive force. The structure would be composed of gravity (negative energy) and matter (positive energy). The repulsive nature of the false vaccum would rapidly inflate it and generate more positive and negative energy along the way (hence filling the universe up). To simplify the concept, our universe might be flactuation in asymptotic nothingness that divided it into gravity and matter. In other words, matter + gravity = 0 (this is observable in the universe).



If we're defining nothing as asymptotic nothing then the identity (for our universe specifically) might be:

asymptotic nothing = gravity + matter
something = (asymptotic nothing - matter) UNION (asymptotic nothing - gravity)




Interesting thoughts CC!!

Could it be suggested that if absolute nothingness gains time we have "matter"? Therefore time is in itself energy, past and future?
thus matter is the manifestation of time.
[ after-all all matter has a past and all matter has a future yes?]

If matter was not to have a future it would cease to exist.

This leads to the interesting notion that to destroy matter entirely means to destroy time entirely which means that to to destroy one piece of matter is actually equivalent to destroying all matter [ the universe ] due to [ as one sci fi writer has described [ Charles Stross ~ Iron Sunrise. pub. 2005 ]], a casuality violation that would ensue. Meaning that if one part of the universe was to become absolute nothingness [no time] then all the universe would have to do so as well. Keeping in mind that we would have to accept the definition of nothingness being that everything must be in a relationship with everything, to come to this conclusion.

In other words the universe could not tolerate the existance of absolute nothingness .

So in the near final wash we see the distinction between two concepts:
1] Absolute zero and 2] infinitely small.

I would surmise that infiniteley small could co-exist but absolute zero could not.

Any thoughts??

TruthSeeker
06-09-06, 03:18 AM
Time implies that there is energy, which changes. Time is a measure of change- to put it simply. But of course, space does not exist separate to time. So if you take away space with your "nothingness", then it follows that time would also not exist there. But that purely depends on your definition of "nothingness". You are talking about a concrete "nothingness", which is paradoxical in itself...

Quantum Quack
06-09-06, 03:41 AM
Time implies that there is energy, which changes. Time is a measure of change- to put it simply. But of course, space does not exist separate to time. So if you take away space with your "nothingness", then it follows that time would also not exist there. But that purely depends on your definition of "nothingness". You are talking about a concrete "nothingness", which is paradoxical in itself...

I would proably say it the other way round.
Energy or more importantly the differential between negative and positive energy creates what we call change or what we call time.

for example:

If we take the abstraction, that a particle is created with enough differential to last 1 million years. In other words it has enough differential to change for 1million years and after it has exhausted it's differential the energy becomes equal and change ceases. if change ceases then time ceases, therefore nothing exists after the equaling of energy.

So therefore if the universe was created with enough differential this differential would generate time or change until that differential became equal, [ entropy I think it is called.]

So what we have at any given moment is mass that has a future only because of it's diffential in energies. Without it the NOW would cease to have any value and everything would cease to exist. As time would not progress forward because no change would be taking place.

the question comes to mind : Why does the differential generate change? And is change ultimately destined to achieve nothingness [ balance]

And if that is the case then Nothingness is our most powerful force even though it does not exist. A force by default due to the fact that everything is heading towards achieveing that state.

Therefore I would go on to propose that gravity is infact the manifestation of that attraction and mass only exists because it is energy in a state of imbalance [ time ] that inevitabley will find balance.
The famous Higgs bosun doesn't exist....which is why it is so powerful.

The only paradox I see, only presents itself is when we consider the universe to have an absolute beginning.

c7ityi_
06-09-06, 10:31 AM
Therefore I would go on to propose that gravity is infact the manifestation of that attraction and mass only exists because it is energy in a state of imbalance [ time ] that inevitabley will find balance.

but things don't find balance... they only find apparent balance, like when cells stop dividing... but the being is either male or female, so the imbalance continues...

if the universe exists now... it will exist forever...

two bodies can't unite, but maybe it's possible to unite in the consciousness. but even then, it might just start over again. maybe there is no eternal nirvana...

Crunchy Cat
06-09-06, 12:15 PM
Interesting thoughts CC!!

The result of science, speculation, and sugar :).


Could it be suggested that if absolute nothingness gains time we have "matter"? Therefore time is in itself energy, past and future?
thus matter is the manifestation of time.
[ after-all all matter has a past and all matter has a future yes?]

Sorry to be nitpicky, but I honestly can't see an absolute nothing existing. Asymptotic nothing on the other hand... there's at least some mathematical support for it :). I'll speculate that part of the *something* that might exist as the structure of an asymptotic vaccum is non-polarized energy. The laws of physics could polarize it through fluctuation, and time would be part of the function of the laws of physics that gives the entire asymptotic vaccum a unique state at any given moment. It might look something like this:

eNP = Non-Polarized Energy (infinite size)
vT = Time (a state vector able to record at variable rates -r-)
lP = Laws of physics (finite object)

I suspect to get from eNP to a polarized structure this would have to happen:

vT(lP.rate).nextState = lp(eNP)

and nextState[tiny section] would contain an expandable polarization.



If matter was not to have a future it would cease to exist.

This leads to the interesting notion that to destroy matter entirely means to destroy time entirely which means that to to destroy one piece of matter is actually equivalent to destroying all matter [ the universe ] due to [ as one sci fi writer has described [ Charles Stross ~ Iron Sunrise. pub. 2005 ]], a casuality violation that would ensue. Meaning that if one part of the universe was to become absolute nothingness [no time] then all the universe would have to do so as well. Keeping in mind that we would have to accept the definition of nothingness being that everything must be in a relationship with everything, to come to this conclusion.

In other words the universe could not tolerate the existance of absolute nothingness .

So in the near final wash we see the distinction between two concepts:
1] Absolute zero and 2] infinitely small.

I would surmise that infiniteley small could co-exist but absolute zero could not.

Any thoughts??

In our universe specifically, I suspect that if a hunk of positive energy were really destroyed then a corresponding hunk of negative energy would go as well. I don't necessarily think it would destroy the universe. It might just cause it to string by the volume of it's destroyed contents when in actuality those contents may simply be reclaimed by the asymptotic vaccum (non-polarized energy).

Infinities apply to some physical volumes, but they may not apply to physical division (there is likely an end point as to how small something can get for example).

TruthSeeker
06-09-06, 01:37 PM
"Infinities apply to some physical volumes, but they may not apply to physical division (there is likely an end point as to how small something can get for example). "
Why?

Crunchy Cat
06-09-06, 04:01 PM
"Infinities apply to some physical volumes, but they may not apply to physical division (there is likely an end point as to how small something can get for example). "
Why?

I actually misstated what I meant. I meant infinities MIGHT apply to some physical volumns and MIGHT NOT apply to physical division. The reason for the volume assertion is that many 'where did out universe come from' theories, predict an infinite amount of *something* outside our universe. The reason for the division assertion is that we have seen mathematical series like pi and fibonnoci appear in nature; however, those series are mathematiclly infinite and their corresponding appearances in physical nature arent.

TruthSeeker
06-09-06, 04:41 PM
There are biilions of atoms in an apple and yet we only see an apple. Are you sure you want to trust on appearances?

Quantum Quack
06-09-06, 09:05 PM
Sorry to be nitpicky, but I honestly can't see an absolute nothing existing. Asymptotic nothing on the other hand... there's at least some mathematical support for it .
I agree,

In the case of absolute nothingness it is an "all or nothing" proposition.
Logcally absolute nothingness can not co-exist in a universe of "things"

Wilmet
06-09-06, 10:58 PM
I would proably say it the other way round.
Energy or more importantly the differential between negative and positive energy creates what we call change or what we call time.

for example:

If we take the abstraction, that a particle is created with enough differential to last 1 million years. In other words it has enough differential to change for 1million years and after it has exhausted it's differential the energy becomes equal and change ceases. if change ceases then time ceases, therefore nothing exists after the equaling of energy.



However, although that which it has changed to might continue to exist for a time in that state (dormant?)... from what I understand, it will eventually become useful (awaken?) to become part of another form of (active?) energy.

Crunchy Cat
06-10-06, 03:13 AM
There are biilions of atoms in an apple and yet we only see an apple. Are you sure you want to trust on appearances?

It's not a matter of trust. It's self-evident (i.e. it is what it is).

TruthSeeker
06-10-06, 12:37 PM
It's not self-evident. You know that what you see is not what is actually there. You just rather deny and believe that it is actually there. It's easier that way...

RoyLennigan
06-10-06, 02:48 PM
It's not self-evident. You know that what you see is not what is actually there. You just rather deny and believe that it is actually there. It's easier that way...
looking at the computer screen right now, can you make out the individual pixels? what if you look very closely? no how about with a magnifying glass? its no different than looking at an apple and not seeing the individual molecules. we see a composite--the big picture--because of our scale. but what we see is still actually there in reality. how we see it might be a relation in our minds, but that relation is still exactly how it is in reality. it doesn't matter if its green or blue or red, as long as all the other colors are still relative in the exact same way. like when you look at a film negative. all the colors are reversed, but they are still exactly relative to each other as they are in real life.

what we experience is merely relations between things. we do not experience the apple, we experience how the entity described by the word 'apple' is relative to everything around it (as well as our memories).

TruthSeeker
06-10-06, 03:19 PM
http://www.sciforums.com/showthread.php?t=55509

sisyphus__
06-10-06, 04:16 PM
I should post a freakin thread, truthseeker :P
For example were I to perhaps post "Mental Health and the Existentialists", surely assuming that the thread relates; I'd arrive with you guys seeing a view of a similar matter.

I believe, that intimacy and passionatness with other beings may infact lead to insightful truths, of course the attaning of such falsehoods seems and does infact appear impossible, I can mention remaing that it is obtainable in the fact it is an experience of being....

"The Value of nothing is everything", i'd prefer "The Value of Nothing is Everything", of course, QQ likely had his thought straight anyway.
Back to the matter.
The point is simple: the world is fundamnetally lesbian is an outlook, ITALLICS, on to the issues of so called "nothingness", or related attitudes.

If any of you could possibly be interested, post, or PM.
existabrent,

sisyphus__
06-10-06, 04:20 PM
Of course Roys point above also brings up the issue presented eariler, I believe my first or maybe second post to the thread... there are many forms of people: we are here assuming simply that (as always, and everywhere most of the time) people are able to view such a thing in a certain way [the microscope example]. Point being, if you could notice that people see things differently, is also a correlate to the theory presented here.

???
Am I wrong!

Crunchy Cat
06-10-06, 05:49 PM
It's not self-evident. You know that what you see is not what is actually there. You just rather deny and believe that it is actually there. It's easier that way...

That apple would be exactly what is there. I use a word to differentiate it from other matter because I can comprehend the differences. Similarly, it doesn't matter if the apple is made up of billions of atoms. It still has a finite number of them that it's composed of (i.e. it's not infinite).

c7ityi_
06-10-06, 06:01 PM
That apple would be exactly what is there. I use a word to differentiate it from other matter because I can comprehend the differences. Similarly, it doesn't matter if the apple is made up of billions of atoms. It still has a finite number of them that it's composed of (i.e. it's not infinite).

it's infinite becuz an atom is composed of infinite smaller 'particles' or whatever.

RoyLennigan
06-10-06, 06:23 PM
it's infinite becuz an atom is composed of infinite smaller 'particles' or whatever.
but we quantify them by finite measurements. all electrical charges are integer multiples of the quantum electrical measurement. even if it can be broken down into infinitesimal pieces, those pieces still come in 'packets' or groupings of energy that cannot (as we have observed repeatedly) be broken apart in the state of our space.

TruthSeeker
06-10-06, 10:05 PM
it's infinite becuz an atom is composed of infinite smaller 'particles' or whatever.
PRECISELY.

TruthSeeker
06-10-06, 10:06 PM
but we quantify them by finite measurements. all electrical charges are integer multiples of the quantum electrical measurement. even if it can be broken down into infinitesimal pieces, those pieces still come in 'packets' or groupings of energy that cannot (as we have observed repeatedly) be broken apart in the state of our space.
You said it correctly- we quantify them by finite measurements.

Crunchy Cat
06-11-06, 01:03 AM
it's infinite becuz an atom is composed of infinite smaller 'particles' or whatever.

How do you know this?

TruthSeeker
06-11-06, 01:42 PM
It's pretty obvjous, CC. How many numbers are between 0 and 1?

RoyLennigan
06-11-06, 02:13 PM
You said it correctly- we quantify them by finite measurements.
and so does nature, it seems. all matter is quantitatively composed. matter is made up of energy in multiples of a quantum charge--the charge of an electron. that is, the energy that composes any bit of matter can be divided by only whole numbers of a fundamental charge (the quantum called the electron) firgured by the ratio of charge to mass.

TruthSeeker
06-11-06, 03:20 PM
No, nature doesn't "think" like us. The number "1" is just a concept that we use to symbolize something. When you look at an apple, you don't see one apple. You see a collection of equal or similar molecules which, collectively, you call an apple. It has distinctive attributes which separates itself from the world around it.

Crunchy Cat
06-11-06, 05:35 PM
It's pretty obvjous, CC. How many numbers are between 0 and 1?

Depends on the precision of the measurement. In a precision-less mathematical environment the result is infinite. In a precision-based mathematical environment, the result is finite.

c7's assertion of absolute truth was that a finite physical construct has an infinite amount of subdivisions. I asked how he knew, and you responded by saying because mathematical abstractions exist that are infinite. You're claiming a factual 1:1 correlation between abstraction and reality and calling it obvious.

I am ok with any claim so long as you are able to provide evidence for it. Show me any physical construct that is infinite.

Quantum Quack
06-11-06, 09:47 PM
One of the reasons I tend to think of the universe as being both finite and infinite.....or infinitely finite can be described using the following scenario:

You take a two dimensional plane, say a rectangle and you curl it into a cylinder. Now the cylinder wall has no thickness yet the outer dimensions of the cylinder are finite. You then count how many smaller cylinders you can fit inside this cylinder or outside this cylinder with out altering the finite dimensions of that cylinder.
Obviously an infinite number of cylinders can fit inside this cylnder yet the cylinder maintains a finite dimension. [ consider then a 2 dimensional sphere constructed the same way.[a balloon with a two dimesional skin]]

It raises I think, an interesting philosophical question:

Can zero be claimed to be finite when one considers nothing as an absolute zero. In other words is zero a finite measurement of nothingness?

In that it can't have value so therefore it is restrained from being anything else but zero due to everything else being something thus zero could be considered as finite?

Crunchy Cat
06-11-06, 10:42 PM
One of the reasons I tend to think of the universe as being both finite and infinite.....or infinitely finite can be described using the following scenario:

You take a two dimensional plane, say a rectangle and you curl it into a cylinder. Now the cylinder wall has no thickness yet the outer dimensions of the cylinder are finite. You then count how many smaller cylinders you can fit inside this cylinder or outside this cylinder with out altering the finite dimensions of that cylinder.
Obviously an infinite number of cylinders can fit inside this cylnder yet the cylinder maintains a finite dimension. [ consider then a 2 dimensional sphere constructed the same way.[a balloon with a two dimesional skin]]

I have an issue with this thought experiment. In order to place cyliniders inside cylinders, a 3-d space has to encompass the 2-d space. Similarly, to curl a 2-d space in the manner suggested means it has to exist in a 3-d space; otherwise, curling would have nothing more than the effect of diverging two parallel paths of the 2-d space at some point. If we introduce a 2-d structure in 3-d space, I suspect it would have to inherit a 3rd dimension (even if its the smallest possible unit) in order for it to exist. Ever seen any real 2-d constructs in our universe?


It raises I think, an interesting philosophical question:

Can zero be claimed to be finite when one considers nothing as an absolute zero. In other words is zero a finite measurement of nothingness?

In that it can't have value so therefore it is restrained from being anything else but zero due to everything else being something thus zero could be considered as finite?

Zero might be considered a midpoint between the negative and positive. As far as being a measure of nothingness... I wouldn't even know where to begin speculating. There are no known patches of nothingness to even infer from :).

c7ityi_
06-11-06, 10:42 PM
How do you know this?

everything must be composed of something, otherwise it's an illusion, it's infinite, and composed of nothing. but if something is composed of something, what is that something then? if there were some fundamental indestructible particles, how can they exist when they can't be divided? how could they build up? what would they be "made of"? nothing?

the only indestructible is nothingness. but it can seem/be destructible because it's infinite, and our world is an illusion.

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/dp5/infdiv.htm

baumgarten
06-11-06, 11:06 PM
It's pretty obvjous, CC. How many numbers are between 0 and 1?
Math != Physics

Quantum Quack
06-11-06, 11:14 PM
Ever seen any real 2-d constructs in our universe?
If I am not mistaken it is proposed that a photon is 2 dimesional. And no I have never seen a photon, although I may have seen it's effects.

I guess if we look at an object such as a brick we tend to think of it being a solid 3 dimensional construct yet it could be proposed that it is really a 3 dimensional rendition of what is essentially two dimensional.
This is premised on the notion that energy [ light, EM etc ] are basically 2 dimesnional constructs.

3 dimesnions can now be considered as being length, width and time [ depth is no longer relevant]

As discussed eariler, the photon has no rest frame and that at any moment it's event occurs at an infinitely small duration point in space time thus the 4 th dimension [ time ] is two dimensional and as everything complies with the 4 th dimension , time [ in this universe any way ] it could be extrapolated to mean that what we witness is always 2 dimensional [ or a total of 3 dimesnions including time]. It is just that we look at everything from it's end point and not it's flat side. Like looking at a 2 dimensional plane's end rather than it's flat.

As everyone has a unique perspective or position of perspective it means that no matter which direction you look towards you are always seeing the end point of a two dimensional plane.

This aspect of my thinking on the subject is extremely hard to convey, because the first question that comes up is :

If we are looking at the end point of a two dimensional plane we should see nothing. yes?

However I would suggest that because this end point is constantly changing due to the third dimension time, it is by way of temporal memory that reality is realised into consciousness.

BTW in IMO memory is not just the priviledge of life forms. A brick also retains a memory of it's existance at a fundamental level. It's very construction is dependant on past events and future events. so the constantly changing brick is because of it's interactions with other matter and retains a memory of those interactions, That memory being the sum of what it is now.

In the film AI1 about artificial intelligence it was mentioned towards the end of the film that an alien race had discovered that all is remembered, that by taking a simple objject and analysing it correctly one can unravel it's entire past. I tend to agree with this speculation.

Every single interaction that object had with the universe around it is what makes it the object it is but further more it makes the universe what it is. So if you take your analysis to the absolute maximum resolution the entire universe past is able to be viewed simply by analysing a single object. So in this way infinity and eternity exists in a single point of space time. [ Even if one considers randomness, eternity is still open to inspection.]

To sum up,
Because time has no rest frame reality doesn't either. there fore time can be said to cancel out one of the three dimensions we usually refer to, and in my example scenario I have chosen depth as the dimension I have cancelled.

And in doing so it can be proposed that reality is in fact 2 dimesnional plus time.

Sorry if I have confused. Tricky subject this is.

Quantum Quack
06-11-06, 11:28 PM
BTW this ties in with many Eastern thoughts about:
If one focusses only on the NOW with neither past or future one can see the truth of existance. That existance is in fact nothingess.

If one considers Sci fi writings of hyper space one can see that if matter can be reduced to existing only in the NOW it can exist any where in this universe simultaneously. [ referring to quantum entanglements makes for an interesting collection of thoughts hey?]

Thus you could theoretically drop out of time and then return to it at a very distant and different location with out any time passing. [Quantum tunneling]

Crunchy Cat
06-12-06, 12:55 AM
everything must be composed of something, otherwise it's an illusion, it's infinite, and composed of nothing.

How would you know with absolute certainty that everything MUST be composed of something?


but if something is composed of something, what is that something then? if there were some fundamental indestructible particles, how can they exist when they can't be divided? how could they build up? what would they be "made of"? nothing?

You are asking all the right quesions... the best answer is that right now nobody knows (that includes you as well). We can speculate and must avoid making claims of absolute truth.

http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/dp5/infdiv.htm[/QUOTE]

I found some errors in the article, but overall it makes a great argument that elasticity requires division. Let's speculate a moment on M-Theory... and I mean speculate. A string (if it even exists) is a plank length unit of structure often asserted as the smallest possible thing. I've even used that same assertion in conjecture, but if string theory is true, the assertion might be false. Why? Because a 'string' would be vibrating across multiple dimensions simultaneously (11 of them). Clearly, for 11 dimensons to intersect a string, the string is logically intersected in at least 11 places. Simiarly, for strings to vibrate, there would have to be degrees of freedom to be in any particular vibrational state (multiple peaks and valleys). To make things more interesting, the 'stuff' that a string is made out of is some sort of energy (I'll just call it exotic energy). Dividing it / magnifying it, doesn't reveal any unseen parts (hence there is no further depth). The same thing would be true for dimensions themselves... no more unseen parts when dividing/magnifying them. Therefore a definition of the smallest possible point could be where information exists and has no degrees of freedom (ex. the point on a string where vibration becomes zero if seperated from the string).


the only indestructible is nothingness. but it can seem/be destructible because it's infinite, and our world is an illusion.

I would disagree with that claim. Technically speaking, destruction isn't something that really occurs. Humans tend to use the term to describe extreme state changes of matter/energy, but neither can be destroyed (at least from within the context of reality). Regarding nothingness being indestructable, again we don't even have the slightest hints that 'nothing' exists; hence, to make a claim of absolute truth about the behavior of a speculation is sort of silly.

Crunchy Cat
06-12-06, 02:31 AM
If I am not mistaken it is proposed that a photon is 2 dimesional. And no I have never seen a photon, although I may have seen it's effects.

I guess if we look at an object such as a brick we tend to think of it being a solid 3 dimensional construct yet it could be proposed that it is really a 3 dimensional rendition of what is essentially two dimensional.
This is premised on the notion that energy [ light, EM etc ] are basically 2 dimesnional constructs.

3 dimesnions can now be considered as being length, width and time [ depth is no longer relevant]

I've actually never heard of this before. Very cool but it's absolutely foreign to me. Any ref's I could chew on to understand this better?


As discussed eariler, the photon has no rest frame and that at any moment it's event occurs at an infinitely small duration point in space time thus the 4 th dimension [ time ] is two dimensional and as everything complies with the 4 th dimension , time [ in this universe any way ] it could be extrapolated to mean that what we witness is always 2 dimensional [ or a total of 3 dimesnions including time]. It is just that we look at everything from it's end point and not it's flat side. Like looking at a 2 dimensional plane's end rather than it's flat.

I'm going to throw a wrench in these assertions :). Photons don't travel through time (which makes it odd because we measure it's 'speed' in a pure vaccum at 186,282 mps). So how does that work? Roughly speaking, stick a beam of light out there and it occupies all possible points of space at once (doesn't do jack for time). What happens to us is we are wisked through those points because of time but we are exluded from all the points at once. I know thats really goofy to conceptualize, but nothing about photons and time ever is easy. Technically, that would make photons 3-d (no 4th 'dimension' of time). Take away a spatial dimension and it becomes 2-d).


As everyone has a unique perspective or position of perspective it means that no matter which direction you look towards you are always seeing the end point of a two dimensional plane.

This aspect of my thinking on the subject is extremely hard to convey, because the first question that comes up is :

If we are looking at the end point of a two dimensional plane we should see nothing. yes?

However I would suggest that because this end point is constantly changing due to the third dimension time, it is by way of temporal memory that reality is realised into consciousness.

I think I'll need to understand the 2-d model in more detail before commenting on this puppy.


BTW in IMO memory is not just the priviledge of life forms. A brick also retains a memory of it's existance at a fundamental level. It's very construction is dependant on past events and future events. so the constantly changing brick is because of it's interactions with other matter and retains a memory of those interactions, That memory being the sum of what it is now.

In the film AI1 about artificial intelligence it was mentioned towards the end of the film that an alien race had discovered that all is remembered, that by taking a simple objject and analysing it correctly one can unravel it's entire past. I tend to agree with this speculation.

Every single interaction that object had with the universe around it is what makes it the object it is but further more it makes the universe what it is. So if you take your analysis to the absolute maximum resolution the entire universe past is able to be viewed simply by analysing a single object. So in this way infinity and eternity exists in a single point of space time. [ Even if one considers randomness, eternity is still open to inspection.]

To sum up,
Because time has no rest frame reality doesn't either. there fore time can be said to cancel out one of the three dimensions we usually refer to, and in my example scenario I have chosen depth as the dimension I have cancelled.

And in doing so it can be proposed that reality is in fact 2 dimesnional plus time.

Sorry if I have confused. Tricky subject this is.

I think I understand the jist of it and I'll need a reference for that 2-d energy stuff. I'll be able to better respond then and associate it to the original thought expeirment I took issue with.

Crunchy Cat
06-12-06, 02:35 AM
BTW this ties in with many Eastern thoughts about:
If one focusses only on the NOW with neither past or future one can see the truth of existance. That existance is in fact nothingess.

If one considers Sci fi writings of hyper space one can see that if matter can be reduced to existing only in the NOW it can exist any where in this universe simultaneously. [ referring to quantum entanglements makes for an interesting collection of thoughts hey?]

Thus you could theoretically drop out of time and then return to it at a very distant and different location with out any time passing. [Quantum tunneling]

I have a hunch we would need a better understanding of what exactly time is :).

baumgarten
06-12-06, 02:42 AM
If I am not mistaken it is proposed that a photon is 2 dimesional. And no I have never seen a photon, although I may have seen it's effects.
From what I understand, a photon does not have a volume, per se, but it can move in all three spatial dimensions.

Absane
06-12-06, 02:51 AM
From what I understand, a photon does not have a volume, per se, but it can move in all three spatial dimensions.

Maybe it moves in 2D? If you think about it, put two 3D spaces in 4D and intersect them... what you got is a 2D intersection (assuming they are not parallel.. parallel intersection would just create a sub-3D space, being equal in size or smaller than "smaller" 3D space).

Absane
06-12-06, 03:00 AM
It's pretty obvjous, CC. How many numbers are between 0 and 1?

How "many" numbers there are in (0,1) does not reflex divisibility in the real world. Besides, assume object A, which has a known size and known mass. By your statement, you are saying object B with a size 10 times that amount and 10 times the mass of A has the same number of particles as A? Though possible, I doubt it.

Quantum Quack
06-12-06, 03:16 AM
I'm going to throw a wrench in these assertions . Photons don't travel through time (which makes it odd because we measure it's 'speed' in a pure vaccum at 186,282 mps). So how does that work? Roughly speaking, stick a beam of light out there and it occupies all possible points of space at once (doesn't do jack for time). What happens to us is we are wisked through those points because of time but we are exluded from all the points at once. I know thats really goofy to conceptualize, but nothing about photons and time ever is easy. Technically, that would make photons 3-d (no 4th 'dimension' of time). Take away a spatial dimension and it becomes 2-d).

I tend to agree with this CC in a general sense. The photon is time, just as I have proposed energy is time.
But and this is the main point, because a photons existance in time is infinitely small [ no rest frame ] when intersecting a photon you are drawing a plane that has zero thickness. Or in other words because a photon is two dimensional it has no rest frame. [ a photon has no "bulk" or size that cause it to take time to pass a given point in space time. [ It passes as if it is of no thickness.....sheesh hard to explain sorry]

So when you look around you, you are witnessing in this sense light that has no rest frame thus what you are looking at [ ignoring memory for a moment] is zero in duration, thus time is continuous without pause. how ever because we can remember the movement or change existance has temporal value.

If a photon had 3 spatial dimesnions it would no longer exist with out a rest frame and have volume and mass. [ using the normal interpretation of rest frame] In effect you would be able to witness a photon in transit and of course this can not be done as to do so would place the observer in a state of nothingness. A zero rest frame of no static duration.

Because all mass is traveling in synch with the photon we can not witrness it as it IS what we see and not the CAUSE of what we see....[ maybe... that's easier]

As reflected mass is what we observe it can only be observed as the photon allows it to be which means the mass has a temporal value only and has no rest frame either. I guess I might argue that a rest frame is really only a temporal state and not a reality. [ no absolute rest frame is allowed]
Thus matter is never static enough to be said to exist but more correctly it could be considered as exist-ing. [ "exist" seems to imply in this context a state that has some sort of stasis]

So as you look aroung you the reality of what you see if one discounts memory never exists but is exist-ing.

And as we can not observe a zero duration event with out hindsight or temporal memory we are essentially looking only at a memory and not the actual thing we are looking at as it has moved forward in time at the event horizon of consciousness [ time]
thus reality can be described as two dimensional with time as the third as width, which requires a rest frame doesn't really exist

If you think of a sphere that has an infinite number of spikes extending outwards in all directions simultaneously and consider those spikes as 2 dimensional planes with their ends at the center of the sphere you realise that reality exists only as a temporal state.

It is very difficult to conceptualise. Very difficult. But as you watch an object go by you are really only seeing a continuous slice of time or change that is changing at the rate of 'c'. there is no lingering except as a temporal memory state only.

As an aid to understanding imagine a reality where no memory exists. If you think about it you will realise I feel, that with out temporal considerations reality does not exist as a 3 dimensional plus time but more a two dimensional plus time. And because it is 2 dimensional the Now can not be observed, thus the paradox comes to the fore, where by we see the NOW even though the true Now is unobservable. We only ever see the past side of that two dimensional plane which is really a time event horizon, which the photon is smack in the middle of.

Another way is to draw a line and consider it as a linea representation of the passage of time, slice this line with a two dimensional plane and you can see that the plane has two sides, one side is the past and the other is the future. The duration betweeen past and future is zero [ or infinitely small]

The photon exists at this point between past and future thus the photon must be two dimensional. [ it takes no time for the photon to pass a point in space time, it passes instantaneously [ no thickness ]

so when you consider that we see only the light and light is 2 dimesnional then we can see nothing yet we are see-ing everything.....hmmmmm.

So therefore the glib head line is " The value of nothing is everything"

c7ityi_
06-12-06, 07:25 AM
You are asking all the right quesions... the best answer is that right now nobody knows (that includes you as well). We can speculate and must avoid making claims of absolute truth.

but i want to know everything...

little kids sometimes say: "i am the best". everyone thinks they're god, because in reality, we are, we've just fallen into matter. sometimes it's hard to accept that we don't know everything.

but i also think that if we know nothing... like socrates... maybe we are the most wise...
it could be that nothing is the only thing to know.

Humans tend to use the term to describe extreme state changes of matter/energy, but neither can be destroyed (at least from within the context of reality).

yeah... but that's not really what i meant either... but... if matter can't be destroyed, how is it possible that it exists? if it can be created from nothing, it must be possible to destroy it too.

Regarding nothingness being indestructable, again we don't even have the slightest hints that 'nothing' exists; hence, to make a claim of absolute truth about the behavior of a speculation is sort of silly.

i seriously think everything is made of nothing... that way... it makes sense that nothing can be destroyed... you can only convert energy to another form.

Crunchy Cat
06-12-06, 10:45 AM
but i want to know everything...

little kids sometimes say: "i am the best". everyone thinks they're god, because in reality, we are, we've just fallen into matter. sometimes it's hard to accept that we don't know everything.

Wanting to know is one thing. Knowing why you want to know is even better. Making artificial assertions of truth just so that you have an answer promotes ignorance.


but i also think that if we know nothing... like socrates... maybe we are the most wise...
it could be that nothing is the only thing to know.

I see it wiser from learning things and indirectly inferring how much we don't know based on what we do.



yeah... but that's not really what i meant either... but... if matter can't be destroyed, how is it possible that it exists? if it can be created from nothing, it must be possible to destroy it too.

Nobody knows at this point how it's possible it exists or even if that question is applicable. Prior to the original string theory, physiacists had to deal with something they felt was embarrassing. 0 points (i.e. the reduction of everything into nothing) and it caused alot of problems with their physical models. The original string theory, newer superstring theory, and present m-theory all have a lowest common denominator of 1 (i.e. the reduction of everything into the smallest unit of something). This actually solved quite a bit of problems in one fell swoop.

[/QUOTE]
i seriously think everything is made of nothing... that way... it makes sense that nothing can be destroyed... you can only convert energy to another form.[/QUOTE]

It makes absolutely no sense. One is that there's no evidence to even suggest nothing exists. The other is that nothing by it's very conceptuial definition is pure absence. In other words it's a contradiction / violation for something to have a base of nothing. They are mutually exlusive.

TruthSeeker
06-12-06, 12:42 PM
Depends on the precision of the measurement. In a precision-less mathematical environment the result is infinite. In a precision-based mathematical environment, the result is finite.
Which one is the correct one?

c7's assertion of absolute truth was that a finite physical construct has an infinite amount of subdivisions. I asked how he knew, and you responded by saying because mathematical abstractions exist that are infinite. You're claiming a factual 1:1 correlation between abstraction and reality and calling it obvious.

I am ok with any claim so long as you are able to provide evidence for it. Show me any physical construct that is infinite.
Look in the mirror.

TruthSeeker
06-12-06, 12:44 PM
One of the reasons I tend to think of the universe as being both finite and infinite.....or infinitely finite can be described using the following scenario:

You take a two dimensional plane, say a rectangle and you curl it into a cylinder. Now the cylinder wall has no thickness yet the outer dimensions of the cylinder are finite. You then count how many smaller cylinders you can fit inside this cylinder or outside this cylinder with out altering the finite dimensions of that cylinder.
Obviously an infinite number of cylinders can fit inside this cylnder yet the cylinder maintains a finite dimension. [ consider then a 2 dimensional sphere constructed the same way.[a balloon with a two dimesional skin]]

It raises I think, an interesting philosophical question:

Can zero be claimed to be finite when one considers nothing as an absolute zero. In other words is zero a finite measurement of nothingness?

In that it can't have value so therefore it is restrained from being anything else but zero due to everything else being something thus zero could be considered as finite?
0=infinity

Absane
06-12-06, 03:19 PM
0=infinity

This reminds me of Gabriel's Horn. Essentially, the length of the curve 1/x from one to infinity is infinite, right? However, the area under the FINITE (it is Pi btw). Furthermore, the surface area if you rotate it about the x-axis in INFINITE. Off-topic, but cool.

Zephyr
06-12-06, 04:07 PM
Volume finite, area infinite, but yes...

Re the thread topic: Planck length? :p

Crunchy Cat
06-12-06, 05:14 PM
Which one is the correct one?

Depends on the implementation doesn't it?


Look in the mirror.

I don't see anything infinte in the mirror.

Absane
06-12-06, 07:41 PM
I don't see anything infinte in the mirror.

Set up two perfect mirrors parallel to each other. There you go :)

Crunchy Cat
06-12-06, 08:23 PM
Set up two perfect mirrors parallel to each other. There you go :)

ha!

TruthSeeker
06-13-06, 12:03 PM
Depends on the implementation doesn't it?
Well, it's completely relative- that's the point.

I don't see anything infinte in the mirror.
Everything is infinite. The first question and answer above is the proof.

Crunchy Cat
06-13-06, 01:04 PM
I'm sorry TruthSeeker, but what you are saying is utterly nonsensical:




...an atom is composed of infinite smaller 'particles' or whatever.



How do you know this?


It's pretty obvjous, CC. How many numbers are between 0 and 1?



Depends on the precision of the measurement. In a precision-less mathematical environment the result is infinite. In a precision-based mathematical environment, the result is finite.


Which one is the correct one?



Depends on the implementation doesn't it?


Well, it's completely relative- that's the point... Everything is infinite. The first question and answer above is the proof.



You have presented zero proof (let alone evidence) that infinite structures exist in reality. Again, if you are making a factual claim about physical structure you have to provide real evidence; however, maybe this is simply a problem of not understanding what the requirements for evidence are (i.e. it might be an educational / experiential issue).

Either way, it's clear that you accept it as absolute truth that *everything* is infinite. I'll speculate that infinities might exist in reality and I suspect they might be proto constructs. Either way I certainly don't know for certain (a big difference between us because you explicitly assert that you do).

Just out of curiousity, lets say the Large Hadron Collider goes online in 2007 and experiments with it show that something like string theory is actually very true. That might lead to a real physical discovery of a 'smallest' unit (definitively making divisions in reality precision-based). How would you cope knowing that what you held as absolute truth turned up false and that your assertions of this truth were actually lies?

Regulus
06-13-06, 01:43 PM
The logic of infinite structures is the structure themselves...

Though there is no hard evidence or proof, we keep finding smaller units of matter. Also on the grounds of everything being built upon something else.

I read the first post here,

mind of a join in and converse with the rest of you?

Anyway, the smallest unit of matter seems igsignificant due to the fact that it in itself would need to be consisting of something else.

Lets look at what we have so far.

an object, wood. the element, that atoms that make the element, the electrons that make the atom, the nucleus inside the atom, what makes the neutrons inside the atom, what makes the quarks that make the neutrons, makes the strings that make the quarks.

There's a pattern here.

Crunchy Cat
06-13-06, 02:26 PM
You are quite correct that physical constructs (from our observation level) can be broken down into smaller and smaller constituents.

A question arose through the course of this thread as to whether this heirarchy is infinite or finite. TruthSeeker is stating that it is 100% infinite without a doubt. I am stating that I simply don't know; however, at least one theoretical model of reality hints it's not.

A thought just occured to me and I don't know if it really has any link to reality. The structure of a computer information can be heirarchical (just like reality). It takes time to enumerate the complete heirarchy and each added layer adds to the total enumeration time. If the heirarchy was infinite then to enumerate it would take infinite time. If we live in a reality of infinite division I might wonder why that some problem doesn't exist.

Regulus
06-13-06, 05:59 PM
The one problem here I agree with you on is that we have no hard evidence or proof, however, there is reasonably infered logic.

Due to this pattern of matter being broken up into incrimants, we can at least... assume, it could be infinite, as we keep finding more and more.

Ahem, now on to what you were explaining.

If I am correct, you are saying that there had to be no beginning? Correct? Well, let us turn over to the theory of energy and matter. Matter cannot be created or destroyed.

That clues us in on what you have just explained. One thing that can answer that is infinite causality. The Universe exploding and imploding infinitely with no beginning or an end to it to thus give the contiuation of INFINITE causes.

Thus in the very least it would mean that the matter we see today has been around for an infinity.

Which links to what you have just said right there about enumerations.

but the one thing that worries me..... is the idea that this topics very title illustrates.

With matter constantly creating itself infinitely it would mean no end meaning there is nothing there, but yet... at the same time there is something. Paradoxal, or.... something we cannot see with the minds we use to contemplate it.

Crunchy Cat
06-13-06, 08:24 PM
The one problem here I agree with you on is that we have no hard evidence or proof, however, there is reasonably infered logic.

That particular logic led to 0 points in particle physics and all sorts of problems arose. String theory on the other hand boiled down to a basic point of 1 and pretty much resolved those problems. Either way, we don't know the truth; although, after 2007 the LHC will at least let us know if there is truth to string, superstring, m-theory.


Due to this pattern of matter being broken up into incrimants, we can at least... assume, it could be infinite, as we keep finding more and more.

For the purpose of modeling we can make any assumption we want. For the purpose of assertion, we can speculate infinite division. We must avoid; however, making a claim (as TruthSeeker has).



Ahem, now on to what you were explaining.

If I am correct, you are saying that there had to be no beginning? Correct? Well, let us turn over to the theory of energy and matter. Matter cannot be created or destroyed.

I have no idea actually. Some inflationary theories predict single inflation/deflation pattern in some kind of pure energy vaccum, some predict cyclic inflation/deflation patterns, steady-state theories show a continuous growth pattern, string-theory shows collision patterns, many-worlds theory shows contianer patters.

But yes, for the physical laws of our reality, matter cannot be created / destroyed (note if other realities exist, they are not necessarily bound by the same physical laws).


That clues us in on what you have just explained. One thing that can answer that is infinite causality. The Universe exploding and imploding infinitely with no beginning or an end to it to thus give the contiuation of INFINITE causes.


This might be right. Either way, I did speculate that some infinities might exist.


Thus in the very least it would mean that the matter we see today has been around for an infinity.


This might be true.


Which links to what you have just said right there about enumerations.


Sort of. My enmeration example was talking about infinte delay between moments of time. This example is about infinite moments of time.


but the one thing that worries me..... is the idea that this topics very title illustrates.

With matter constantly creating itself infinitely it would mean no end meaning there is nothing there, but yet... at the same time there is something. Paradoxal, or.... something we cannot see with the minds we use to contemplate it.

I think you might be toying around with one particular inflation theory. The most popular one predicts our universe will deflate back into a pure non-polarized energy vaccum... where fluctations in other areas have created other universes.

Assuming a constant cyclical inflation/deflation, yes it would mean no end... but that doesn't mean that nothing is there (not sure how you arrived at that thought).

Regulus
06-13-06, 09:08 PM
Well, it was not the cyclical inflation that got me to believen the "nothing", but the idea of infinite structure of atoms, how it never ends in it being built on by something else.

Though I do tend to believen it, becuz I except things paradoxal to the mind, and agree upon the fact that we will never understand everything.

My only reasoning though, for cyclical infation and deflation is the fact that it continues the causality, other than that I don't know how it would effect any other Universe. Any thoughts on this at all? I personally believen the cyclical infation and deflation theory along with the multi universe's theory.

As for other realities existing I agree, it would be different physics, becuz of the different reality in itself, thus a different property and different building block, i.e no size or volume, as it is a 3 dimensional property. Which would also mean that shape and volume is only a 3rd dimension property.

But, for the value of nothing and everything,

the idea that everything is connected, can possibly be reasonably infered, on the grounds that there is infact a center and Omni building block, i.e ever changing building block which can take the form of something like an atom that creates Universes.

Which might also explain the mystery of energy, as it has merely been seen as an action. If EVERYTHING is indeed energy, then maybe the properties of other Universes are. And that energy is ever changing,

thus everything can truely be connected.

I may just be rambling here though,forgive me, I can do that alot, go off on a tangent.

Parhadron
06-13-06, 09:27 PM
Nothingness IS something. However, not every 'something' is everything. :)

Parhadron
06-13-06, 09:46 PM
I mean everything that spins (and essentially everything does) reveals a central "nothing", if not conjoined by such forces as massive fusion and gravitational pull. So rather than nothing, should not the question be, exactly what SHAPE the universe takes over time? With star class clusters reverting to states of singularity (black holes), does not the shape of the universe change somewhat, while the ratio of mass to force i.e., universal mass to first expulsion OUT (fission en masse) simply mean proximity to mass vs. force turns the entire space-time equation into literal swiss cheese (as has already been proposed)? Sure folds seem plausible, but dimensions as exhibited in our universe seem to never need progress beyond the first multiples...otherwise we are simply talking about ghosts in the machine, that is a literal echo in a program. A mirrored 'spin' per se or 'shadow' only seems signify curved space and this is simply a major component of any preliminary math.

Of course 0 is not equal to 1, but prompt 0 can be 1 with absolutely no problem.

Regulus
06-13-06, 09:52 PM
And that is inexoribly where your strength is Parhadron. I am weaker in that area, I am better at solving paradoxes such as the God paradox, (Can God create a rock it cannot carry?)

What your explaining confuses me slightly.

But, I may have an idea.

Crunchy Cat
06-13-06, 10:36 PM
Well, it was not the cyclical inflation that got me to believen the "nothing", but the idea of infinite structure of atoms, how it never ends in it being built on by something else.

Though I do tend to believen it, becuz I except things paradoxal to the mind, and agree upon the fact that we will never understand everything.

Ahh, this is the downfall of belief. It snags you into accepting something as absolute truth and prevents you from further exploration on the topic. If it turns out that there is not infinite division or we figure out everything, you're going to have to reconcile reality contradicting a belief.


My only reasoning though, for cyclical infation and deflation is the fact that it continues the causality, other than that I don't know how it would effect any other Universe. Any thoughts on this at all? I personally believen the cyclical infation and deflation theory along with the multi universe's theory.

I'm not a big fan of the cyclical inflation theory. I am personally rooting for M-theory and speculate that some synthesis of a modern inflation theory and M-theory might lead to an understanding of reality. Between 2007 and 2012 I suspect we'll make some good strides in this area. As far as cyclical inflation affecting other universes is concerned, I suspect that two universes might be able to bump into each other, but what happens then would be anyone's guess.



As for other realities existing I agree, it would be different physics, becuz of the different reality in itself, thus a different property and different building block, i.e no size or volume, as it is a 3 dimensional property. Which would also mean that shape and volume is only a 3rd dimension property.

Many worlds theory predicts some strange shit. It's really cool though.


But, for the value of nothing and everything,

the idea that everything is connected, can possibly be reasonably infered, on the grounds that there is infact a center and Omni building block, i.e ever changing building block which can take the form of something like an atom that creates Universes.

String theory predicts that basic block is a vibrating strand of exotic energy which comes in two varieties. Open and closed. An end of an open one might bind to a cluster of dimension (called a brane) while closed loops might float freely through any dimension and consequently contain quantum gravity within it's loop.


Which might also explain the mystery of energy, as it has merely been seen as an action. If EVERYTHING is indeed energy, then maybe the properties of other Universes are. And that energy is ever changing,

thus everything can truely be connected.

E=MC^2 (as an approximation). That means matter is compressed energy and energy is uncompressed matter. It's all really the same stuff just with compression.

Crunchy Cat
06-13-06, 10:49 PM
I mean everything that spins (and essentially everything does) reveals a central "nothing", if not conjoined by such forces as massive fusion and gravitational pull.

Huh? Did you just say that spinning a top in outer space revels a center of nothing?


So rather than nothing, should not the question be, exactly what SHAPE the universe takes over time?

It might look like an expanding blob of water in zero gravity. The universe's structure however is quite flat.


With star class clusters reverting to states of singularity (black holes), does not the shape of the universe change somewhat, while the ratio of mass to force i.e., universal mass to first expulsion OUT (fission en masse) simply mean proximity to mass vs. force turns the entire space-time equation into literal swiss cheese (as has already been proposed)?

I'll speculate that a singularity would looke like pulling a super thin thread out of a blanket. Yeah, it might make that universal blob look more like a pincushion come to think about it :).


Sure folds seem plausible, but dimensions as exhibited in our universe seem to never need progress beyond the first multiples...otherwise we are simply talking about ghosts in the machine, that is a literal echo in a program. A mirrored 'spin' per se or 'shadow' only seems signify curved space and this is simply a major component of any preliminary math.

Of course 0 is not equal to 1, but prompt 0 can be 1 with absolutely no problem.

I completely lost ya here.

Parhadron
06-13-06, 10:57 PM
I apologize for running ideas together.

But to attempt an answer to your paradox question, I might say that since a rock is matter, and matter is carried by any number of forces (including those which make rocks) while we know that matter exists concomitantly with the force which makes matter it makes sense that matter as a form of energy is indeed 'carried' to its 'present state' extant.

Of course, such would be referring to the first law of thermodynamics: that energy is neither be created or destroyed. The rock form would only be one aspect of energy as seen in one frame of time or everything would simply be composed of rock and this we know is not true. Since chemical hierarchy remains basically the same (according to heat, massive acts of fusion, fission, pressure et al) we are almost always talking about either a product of force or a developing continuum as depends upon proximity to another hierarchy of atomic structure combined/combining en masse.

Yet back to the rock. So a rock is carried at the same time it exists however large or small the accompanying frame (grid upon which said rock is juxtaposed), and we are still talking about a ratio of concurrently existing phenomena. Carriage could be reasoned as mentioned previously to be the very process of matter making, while 'making matter' is always a combination of chemical hierarchy i.e. pressure, heat, generated star stuff. What carries is just part of this process...though the same elements change and in turn the universe remains both in some state of entropy and order according to atomic structure which becomes more or less compact in places (in relation to systems extant, subsequent black hole cominations, forces entailed).

I know this was longwinded. Hopefully, this explanation is a bit less confusing though.

Regulus
06-13-06, 11:02 PM
Well... not belief as in... no logic, but agree upon. I can agree upon this on the premise of the assumption on it never being capable of being destroyed, thus it's truely infinite if it's structurally invulnerably but only seperable. Otherwise there's no other way to really explain matters true invulnerably I suffice.

As for the strings being virbation, what does that vibrating eventuate from? My reason for not favoring the theory completely is that once again all of us with our theories lead back to the same question. This is why I don't favor any real "final" theory on matter completely 100 percent, as it leads to yet another question.

Now, I favor the idea of it though. And can agree with it's concept, but can also infer that the string vibration itself also eventuates from yet another mysterious building block.

What you have explained to me has enlightened me and I have come to favor this theory more than others, though it still leads to what the string itself eventuated from. I happen to think we'll never know. THough I can't prove that.

It is however an interesting theory, as it would explain the eventuality of other building blocks of other dimensions/universes, (one in the same, don't kow why I said both).

as for the inflation and many universes theory, one can also infer that we don't know what the other universe "is". Our universe is of shape and volume, we don't know if the others will need to inflate and deflate, is they are probably made of totally different properies. After all, all we know is the universe before us, a dimension of shape and volume. We can't be sure if it will even hit the others when talking about many universe theory.

The other question is if the other universes aren't made of shape or size or volume, would they simply not touch our universe or come in contact with it?

Crunchy Cat
06-13-06, 11:02 PM
Ahhh the 'God'-rock 'paradox'. Ha.

Regulus
06-13-06, 11:04 PM
it's not litteraly a rock >_>

it's something more powerful then God. Can God create something more powerful then it?

That's the paradox, it's not litteraly a rock. What defeats it is this, if God can do anything, it could create something greater than it and yet be able to be great then it at the same time in that eventuallity becuz it CAN do anything.

and that becuz of it's infinite complexity we will never understand how it can do it, and due to our limited ability to understand it becuz we are once again contemplating it with inferior minds, minds bent on lineral 3 dimensional, size and spacial limit.

Parhadron
06-13-06, 11:04 PM
I like the pincushion idea. Have given some thought to a curved sluice, myself---something like an hourglass or barbell shape, though while easily proved, signifies nothing much better than any other shape proposed with a semblance of curvature.

Crunchy Cat
06-13-06, 11:12 PM
I like the pincushion idea. Have given some thought to a curved sluice, myself---something like an hourglass or barbell shape, though while easily proved, signifies nothing much better than any other shape proposed with a semblance of curvature.

That's spooky. I saw a visual representation of a steady state theory variant and it looked like a continuum of hourglass bulbs.

Parhadron
06-13-06, 11:25 PM
Well, if we are to hold to wave/particle duality, we must posit vibration as a resonant signature of simple interaction. This is what I meant by "ghost". In other words the force which is part of every combination of particle formation, every atomic structure can be easily boiled down to an initial relationship of entropy to order.

I only dislike string theory because I cannot agree on the shape it takes...lol...whether donut (which seems most plausible--as in a closed circuit) or open (as in a loosely constructed potential state). At the atomic level, it does not seem a real reach to see resonance as either "coiled" or "uncoiled", regardless as to reference to potential or as reference to a fixed initial state.

Either way it seems the same thing gets described. I just really want to know what it portends, what it reveals about an ultimate universe (if such can actually be some unified theory) that includes entrophy and order, of course. I look forward to reading more of what you find, know.

TruthSeeker
06-13-06, 11:37 PM
I'm sorry TruthSeeker, but what you are saying is utterly nonsensical
Precisely.The Truth is very illogical. Our brains cannot grasp the Truth. Our brains cannot process the concept of infinity, so it translates it into finity in order to process the information. :cool:

You have presented zero proof (let alone evidence) that infinite structures exist in reality. Again, if you are making a factual claim about physical structure you have to provide real evidence; however, maybe this is simply a problem of not understanding what the requirements for evidence are (i.e. it might be an educational / experiential issue).
As I said above, it is illogical. You cannot prove it- you have to experience it. That's what the ancient Zen-Buddhist and Taoist masters used to say. It all makes sense now. :eek:

Either way, it's clear that you accept it as absolute truth that *everything* is infinite. I'll speculate that infinities might exist in reality and I suspect they might be proto constructs. Either way I certainly don't know for certain (a big difference between us because you explicitly assert that you do).
Once again, I perceive infinity. It's all around me and within me. It cannot be named. It cannot be categorized. It cannot be spoken off. It cannot be proved.

Just out of curiousity, lets say the Large Hadron Collider goes online in 2007 and experiments with it show that something like string theory is actually very true. That might lead to a real physical discovery of a 'smallest' unit (definitively making divisions in reality precision-based). How would you cope knowing that what you held as absolute truth turned up false and that your assertions of this truth were actually lies?
The smallest unit is infinitely small. That's a fact. It may not be a substance. Maybe the smallest unit is a portion of space-time (which is what I see). It's more complex then that, I'm sure. But that's the basics.

Regulus
06-13-06, 11:41 PM
Well, if we are to hold to wave/particle duality, we must posit vibration as a resonant signature of simple interaction. This is what I meant by "ghost". In other words the force which is part of every combination of particle formation, every atomic structure can be easily boiled down to an initial relationship of entropy to order.

I only dislike string theory because I cannot agree on the shape it takes...lol...whether donut (which seems most plausible--as in a closed circuit) or open (as in a loosely constructed potential state). At the atomic level, it does not seem a real reach to see resonance as either "coiled" or "uncoiled", regardless as to reference to potential or as reference to a fixed initial state.

Either way it seems the same thing gets described. I just really want to know what it portends, what it reveals about an ultimate universe (if such can actually be some unified theory) that includes entrophy and order, of course. I look forward to reading more of what you find, know.
Either that or we are surrounded by an ultimate Universe, made of this string energy...

Actually, I'm just rambling now. Maybe I am too tired to contemplate anymore. :D

TruthSeeker
06-13-06, 11:41 PM
The logic of infinite structures is the structure themselves...
Yes, you probably "see" it too... :cool:

Though there is no hard evidence or proof, we keep finding smaller units of matter. Also on the grounds of everything being built upon something else.
...
Anyway, the smallest unit of matter seems igsignificant due to the fact that it in itself would need to be consisting of something else.
Yes. That also brings up another matter (ooops... pun! :D ). The matter of creation. Many atheists claim that a Creator cannot exist because someone needs to create the Creator first. We have the same issue here. But instead, it is something that is made out of something else. There will always be something that must contain something else.

(not that I agree with that atheist argument...)

TruthSeeker
06-13-06, 11:42 PM
A thought just occured to me and I don't know if it really has any link to reality. The structure of a computer information can be heirarchical (just like reality). It takes time to enumerate the complete heirarchy and each added layer adds to the total enumeration time. If the heirarchy was infinite then to enumerate it would take infinite time. If we live in a reality of infinite division I might wonder why that some problem doesn't exist.
That is precisely the problem I always faced when dealing with this issue. The problem was solved when I realized finity is just a concept and infinity is the actual reality. :eek:

TruthSeeker
06-13-06, 11:46 PM
The one problem here I agree with you on is that we have no hard evidence or proof, however, there is reasonably infered logic.

Due to this pattern of matter being broken up into incrimants, we can at least... assume, it could be infinite, as we keep finding more and more.

Ahem, now on to what you were explaining.

If I am correct, you are saying that there had to be no beginning? Correct? Well, let us turn over to the theory of energy and matter. Matter cannot be created or destroyed.

That clues us in on what you have just explained. One thing that can answer that is infinite causality. The Universe exploding and imploding infinitely with no beginning or an end to it to thus give the contiuation of INFINITE causes.

Thus in the very least it would mean that the matter we see today has been around for an infinity.

Which links to what you have just said right there about enumerations.
Yes, very good. However, you do not need the universe to be imploding and exploding all the time. Time is just a perception. We perceive it as finite because that is how our brains are able to deal with it.

but the one thing that worries me..... is the idea that this topics very title illustrates.

With matter constantly creating itself infinitely it would mean no end meaning there is nothing there, but yet... at the same time there is something. Paradoxal, or.... something we cannot see with the minds we use to contemplate it.
Everything in the universe is made out of emptiness and probability. Just keep in my how an atom looks like. ;)

Regulus
06-13-06, 11:46 PM
Yes, you probably "see" it too... :cool:


Yes. That also brings up another matter (ooops... pun! :D ). The matter of creation. Many atheists claim that a Creator cannot exist because someone needs to create the Creator first. We have the same issue here. But instead, it is something that is made out of something else. There will always be something that must contain something else.

(not that I agree with that atheist argument...)Yeah same here on the athiesm thing, that can't be what disproves God.

I agree, there will always be something that makes something else, it also connects with the dimensions theory, a dimension building upon another.

As for the cyclicality of the universe, it is needed TS. Otherwise causality has no explanation.

TruthSeeker
06-13-06, 11:51 PM
I mean everything that spins (and essentially everything does) reveals a central "nothing", if not conjoined by such forces as massive fusion and gravitational pull. So rather than nothing, should not the question be, exactly what SHAPE the universe takes over time? With star class clusters reverting to states of singularity (black holes), does not the shape of the universe change somewhat, while the ratio of mass to force i.e., universal mass to first expulsion OUT (fission en masse) simply mean proximity to mass vs. force turns the entire space-time equation into literal swiss cheese (as has already been proposed)? Sure folds seem plausible, but dimensions as exhibited in our universe seem to never need progress beyond the first multiples...otherwise we are simply talking about ghosts in the machine, that is a literal echo in a program. A mirrored 'spin' per se or 'shadow' only seems signify curved space and this is simply a major component of any preliminary math.

Of course 0 is not equal to 1, but prompt 0 can be 1 with absolutely no problem.
Shapes are human perceptions. Why should the universe have a shape? Does your imagination has shape?

Regulus
06-13-06, 11:55 PM
Now that's what I have been TRYING to explain lol.

This is what I meant by other dimensions having no shape or size in my arguements.

TruthSeeker
06-14-06, 12:03 AM
E=MC^2 (as an approximation). That means matter is compressed energy and energy is uncompressed matter. It's all really the same stuff just with compression.
Not quite. The universe is an infinite interconnected super-string. It is vibrating. Parts of the universe vibrate at lower energies, which makes them more condensed. Those parts are what we perceive as matter. Matter is simply a lower form of energy- energy that is vibrating at a lower level comapred to higher levels. Matter is, particularly, the vibration level which our brains can perceive.

:eek:

:m:

TruthSeeker
06-14-06, 12:04 AM
Now that's what I have been TRYING to explain lol.

This is what I meant by other dimensions having no shape or size in my arguements.
You are obviously very wise. ;)

TruthSeeker
06-14-06, 12:07 AM
As for the cyclicality of the universe, it is needed TS. Otherwise causality has no explanation.
What makes it cyclical? Your perception? ;)

Who is observing the universe? How old is the universe when it starts growing? How old it is when it comes back? What about when it starts growing again?

What is the temporal frame of reference which you are using? ;)

Crunchy Cat
06-14-06, 12:13 AM
As for the strings being virbation, what does that vibrating eventuate from? My reason for not favoring the theory completely is that once again all of us with our theories lead back to the same question. This is why I don't favor any real "final" theory on matter completely 100 percent, as it leads to yet another question.

That's a great question and I don't know. I suspect that one of today's leading string theorists may know... might be answerable with a quick email or if you're not afraid of the crazy math then modeling might show the answer. I do however, have a speculated answer. As a string is energy (possibly in the rawest sense), it might just naturally try to bind towards any nearby space that it isn't in and that would result in perpetual oscillation.


Now, I favor the idea of it though. And can agree with it's concept, but can also infer that the string vibration itself also eventuates from yet another mysterious building block.

In string theory, try to reduce the string into smaller constuents doesn't work... it always leads to the same substance/scale; however, the fact that it does vibrate indiacates that it could at least be sliced up along it's length. All strings are exactly 1 plank length and I suspect there is a point where further attempts at slicing fail.

I suspect that if a piece of a string is sliced off where vibration is no longer possible, then that is literally the smallest unit of anything that could exist... which would consequently equal the size of a point on a dimension; however, that doesn't change the model that the string is at the smallest possible scale nonetheless (i.e. the basic building block).


Wh