12-02-2010, 08:41 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-02-2010, 08:49 PM by Nabil Naser.)
I am happy to see all these posts. My understanding is that the truth becomes clearer with the contributions of many. When all the view points can be explained, accepted, or rejected that we can find a common understanding.
Why spheres?
This seems like a question that must be answered before we progress forward, in order to have a more focused view.
One way of relating the spherical idea with the quantum or point idea is to consider the pepper and salt drawing of the television screen when no channels are active.
First we have to think of the image as a 3-dimensional space in that the points are not on a single plane, as the screen suggests.
Next make an assumption that the points are equidistant from each other, and that each is a center of a sphere. Think of the white as the center of a sphere with a particular energy and the black as the center of a sphere created by the interaction of the spheres with the white center. The spheres expand outward from these points, "I see these points as non-dimensional spheres", and the two types interact. Specific geometry is created. But in truth there is no difference between the two colors, because the black also create the white with the interaction of its spheres.
This way the points and the spheres become one and the same, and the void that is supposed to be within the geometry of packed spheres can be accounted for as the spheres expand outward into each other.
This also create higher densities, rotational potential, and spherical geometry, which the chemical elements use to create form.
As far as the analogy of the screen above, it is the same pepper/salt image that I see when I first begin meditation. As my mind clears, and my body becomes relaxed, until I am hardly aware of it. Next, the image changes, and an image of a night sky appears, that has few points of light, like stars, more points begin to appear and fade away. As I go deeper and concentrate on the center of this night sky, images begin to form. The images that I see are of shapes that look like lit blocks that create complex shapes, that change when you pay attention to any detail. But I can say that they do have angles and planes, and no spheres can be found.
This is the geometry created by the points of connection between packed spheres. They appear cubic and rectangular together creating complex structures.
Why spheres?
This seems like a question that must be answered before we progress forward, in order to have a more focused view.
One way of relating the spherical idea with the quantum or point idea is to consider the pepper and salt drawing of the television screen when no channels are active.
First we have to think of the image as a 3-dimensional space in that the points are not on a single plane, as the screen suggests.
Next make an assumption that the points are equidistant from each other, and that each is a center of a sphere. Think of the white as the center of a sphere with a particular energy and the black as the center of a sphere created by the interaction of the spheres with the white center. The spheres expand outward from these points, "I see these points as non-dimensional spheres", and the two types interact. Specific geometry is created. But in truth there is no difference between the two colors, because the black also create the white with the interaction of its spheres.
This way the points and the spheres become one and the same, and the void that is supposed to be within the geometry of packed spheres can be accounted for as the spheres expand outward into each other.
This also create higher densities, rotational potential, and spherical geometry, which the chemical elements use to create form.
As far as the analogy of the screen above, it is the same pepper/salt image that I see when I first begin meditation. As my mind clears, and my body becomes relaxed, until I am hardly aware of it. Next, the image changes, and an image of a night sky appears, that has few points of light, like stars, more points begin to appear and fade away. As I go deeper and concentrate on the center of this night sky, images begin to form. The images that I see are of shapes that look like lit blocks that create complex shapes, that change when you pay attention to any detail. But I can say that they do have angles and planes, and no spheres can be found.
This is the geometry created by the points of connection between packed spheres. They appear cubic and rectangular together creating complex structures.