Difference between revisions of "Self-Contained and Self-Consistant Universes"

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Latest revision as of 06:35, 12 November 2007

Self-Contained and Self-Consistant Universes

A Self-Constained universe, is when the spacetime creating the perimeter of the universe encloses, ITS information. This means that anything that happens in this universe [WILL NEVER] precisely occur ever again in the universes history of past or future, and neither present.

On more pragmatic terms, it suggests that anything that happens in this universe is actually unique, and that no other universe can experience any particular outcome in this universe, but any other statistic is played out.

A Self-Consistant universe states that the self-containment be in proportional odds of law with being consistant within all of its own laws. In other words, a universe, no matter how bizarre or strange it may seem, it still needs to abide by its own rules.

For instance, a time-traveler could not move into a time that did no have time machines... Why? Because if time machines weren't avalaible, then how could traveling to that time... afterall, the machine was not part of that era's rave.

All universes will be layed out to these equations describing differential and quantum disfigured assumptions describing universes all the same. Instead, all the universes, the infinite amount of them, must have a slight quantum mistake, to make THAT particular universe unique.

There are an infinite amount of unverses, with an infinite amount of outcomes, but only one outcome is ever permitted in a universe...

This also means time. Time flows differently. And if relativity is correct, this also means space, unless the leg of the time dimension is equal with space.

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