Originally posted by McQueen
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Henceforth space by itself , and time by itself , are doomed to fade away into mere shadows , and only a kind of union of the two will preserve an independent reality. Hermann Minkowski
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Minkowski made a simple diagram of space showing the mathematical relationship of past , present and future . The most striking aspect of the diagram is that all of the past and all of the present for each individual meet at one single point “now” or the present.
Furthermore the “now” of each individual is specifically located , and will never be found in any other place , than “here”. (Wherever the observer is
[endquote]rth
*************[McQueen, Richard]
Yes, and the implication that each space has and is its own universe. Hence the relativity prediction that two people nodding to each other as they pass on the street corner this morning have time cones that lead inexorably out of each other's domain, so that if the two could live forever, they would each actually inhabit two different universes, with a separate time history and future. This comes about because each one of us is slightly offset from every other in space, and each of us possesses a slightly differing universal set, and the difference in universal set increases over time, by the butterfly principle, until eventually the two universal sets occupy no common positions.
I think Chroot asked a while ago about two observers looking at a tree from opposite directions. Perhaps the tree stands alone or unique on a ridge and we all agree that if we go there we will find a unified and whole tree trunk, not a forest or a thicket or even a pair of trees. It is one tree. No matter which direction you look at it, or from how far away. But of course the details of the descriptions differ to the different observers. Would I agree that they are looking at a single tree? Or are the different views in some sense actually different trees, each with its own independent universe?
I am sorry Chroot but I will have to go with the lattice...er, latter. Yes. They are different trees. Traced far enough into the futures, they will separate entirely into discrete universes with no adjoint or overlap.
You might wonder where in any time history does this separation take place? Where is the earthquake or the tidal wave or the comet that strikes the earth, to mark the violent events that mark the beginning and the ending of universes? But the answer is too dull. The events are everywhere, the separation goes on continuously. And that brings up a better question. Separation, continuum, discretion, all involve that which changes, that which moves, that which experiences time. And what is that which experiences time? Have we properly asked the sphinx the question?
There is no conservation of Being (not even of definition) in the fourth dimensnion.
Thanks,
Richard.
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