It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: muzzleflash
This also explains why CERN has this statue specifically...
Aidan Randle-Conde, a post-doc student working at CERN wrote: “So in the light of day, when CERN is teeming with life, Shiva seems playful, reminding us that the universe is constantly shaking things up, remaking itself and is never static. But by night, when we have more time to contemplate the deeper questions Shiva literally casts a long shadow over our work, a bit like the shadows on Plato’s cave. Shiva reminds me that we still don’t know the answer to one of the biggest questions presented by the universe, and that every time we collide the beams we must take the cosmic balance sheet into account.”
originally posted by: swanne
originally posted by: Cygnis
If you remove time from the equation, what do you get?
Zero velocity?
Velocity is the amount of time required for a particle to move through a given amount of space. Without time, Light wouldn't even travel.
originally posted by: swanne
originally posted by: muzzleflash
This also explains why CERN has this statue specifically...
Actually CERN has this statue because Shiva is the god of destruction and renewal, and represents well the CERN's ability to smash particles into one another to get new particles.
Aidan Randle-Conde, a post-doc student working at CERN wrote: “So in the light of day, when CERN is teeming with life, Shiva seems playful, reminding us that the universe is constantly shaking things up, remaking itself and is never static. But by night, when we have more time to contemplate the deeper questions Shiva literally casts a long shadow over our work, a bit like the shadows on Plato’s cave. Shiva reminds me that we still don’t know the answer to one of the biggest questions presented by the universe, and that every time we collide the beams we must take the cosmic balance sheet into account.”
www.dnaindia.com...
all electrons and positrons are actually manifestations of a single entity moving backwards and forwards in time.
originally posted by: Abednego
originally posted by: muzzleflash
originally posted by: Cygnis
Time is an invention of Man, a measurement. It serves no real purpose but to keep us accountable, and managed. It allows us to catalogue things, and events in order but you don't really need time to do that.
If you remove time from the equation, what do you get?
There is and there is not time. Paradox.
We are within "Eternal Now" but yet "Times they are a Changin"...
At least according to Bob Dylan.
No paradox. Again the Circumpunct.
The outside circle is "time", always moving, always expanding. The point in the center has no time is still, never moving but watching in all directions. The outside circle is part of the point, they are one and two at the same time.
The Eye.
originally posted by: slapjacks
a reply to: muzzleflash
all electrons and positrons are actually manifestations of a single entity moving backwards and forwards in time.
Correct me if I'm wrong because I can't watch then the video and i'm not the brightest crayon in the box when it comes to this stuff.
The way I interpret that is that it's possible to go "back" in time?
originally posted by: swanne
The real question, though, is:
If every particles are one particle, as the OP proposes, and
If all species of particles are composed of a single master particle, and
If time can actually bend backwards so to provide multiple instances of the same particle,
Then,
What causes these lines to bend into such shapes? What forces acts upon the universe to affect literally space and time and weave it as if it was a mere thread into this complex tapestry?
originally posted by: swanne
a reply to: YouSir
I can almost imagine it.
Imagine a white hole, an explosion of matter in all direction, at the beginning of Time, at the Big Bang as people would say.
Then imagine a black hole at the end of times, in the future, at the death of the universe.
As a single particle lives its life in the universe, it eventually crosses the timeline of the universe, and fall into the black hole in the death of the universe.
But that's not the end.
The black hole connects to the white hole at the beginning of the universe.
And so the particle is expulsed out of the white hole at the big bang, and joins the first particle that was there.
And now there's two particles traveling the universe. And upon the universe's death these two get sucked into the black hole, and pumped into the white hole at the Big Bang.
And so there's now four of those particles. The whole process repeats itself. Over and over - soon you get dozen, hundreds, millions, trillions of particles.
And soon you get an universe filled with matter and energy.
Astronomers have discovered that all galaxies rotate once every billion years, no matter how big they are.
originally posted by: muzzleflash
a reply to: YouSir
Genesis 1:27
So God created humans in his image.
In the image of God he created them.
He created them male and female.
originally posted by: YouSir
originally posted by: muzzleflash
a reply to: YouSir
Genesis 1:27
So God created humans in his image.
In the image of God he created them.
He created them male and female.
Ummm...in his image...not in his physical representative image...but in the image of his thought process...in the imagining...the image reflected in the consciousness impinging upon the particles causing them to be thus...
He imagined us and we were so...just as the stars and planets and every beast of the field and everything that walketh or swimith or flies through the air...
YouSir