11-26-2017, 03:27 PM
Man, I initially read your question as "what is space and time" and started getting into some really cool concepts before realizing. Hopefully this tees me up to address the actual topic. I'm going to what it might be like to be in time/space, i.e. what characteristics of our current experience are likely to be magnified or minified in time/space, since we can't easily use a language designed for to describe a completely different quality of experience.
We know how those of Ra describe time/space: a mode of the Creation where space is vectorized and time is traversable at will, as opposed to the inverse in space/time. But what is it like to consciously occupy?
I get the sense that concept is a much more distilled phenomenon in T/S, that distinctions between entities and objects are not pronounced, but everything is much more fluid, as unity100 said. This would make sense, as the ability to articulate time more exactly than space would yield a perception where there are no discrete "things"; they'd be more recognizable as processes than as objects, since your ability to understand them would be to observe them at any time but more or less from a fixed perspective in relative spatial terms.
Perhaps this explains why healing, rest, and review can occur in time/space; one has the ability to observe the incarnation in totality, as a complete hologram of experience. Meanwhile, as painful or distressing as viewing one's life this way may be, it must be restful and healing to be forced by the conditions of existence to balance, since you have no ability to effect anything. It is this inability to "do" at all, but only to "be", that stretches an entity in the opposite direction of space/time incarnation.
Those of Ra describe time/space as "as complex and complete a system of illusions, dances, and pattern as is space/time and has as structured a system of what you may call natural laws". So what would be the temporal version of something like gravity, something that operates on our otherwise free traverse of space? In other words, it sounds like we don't just float about in time anymore than we now float about in space; instead, time appears to have some sort of topology or landscape we navigate as we remain constant spatially.
I'm out of ideas.
We know how those of Ra describe time/space: a mode of the Creation where space is vectorized and time is traversable at will, as opposed to the inverse in space/time. But what is it like to consciously occupy?
I get the sense that concept is a much more distilled phenomenon in T/S, that distinctions between entities and objects are not pronounced, but everything is much more fluid, as unity100 said. This would make sense, as the ability to articulate time more exactly than space would yield a perception where there are no discrete "things"; they'd be more recognizable as processes than as objects, since your ability to understand them would be to observe them at any time but more or less from a fixed perspective in relative spatial terms.
Perhaps this explains why healing, rest, and review can occur in time/space; one has the ability to observe the incarnation in totality, as a complete hologram of experience. Meanwhile, as painful or distressing as viewing one's life this way may be, it must be restful and healing to be forced by the conditions of existence to balance, since you have no ability to effect anything. It is this inability to "do" at all, but only to "be", that stretches an entity in the opposite direction of space/time incarnation.
Those of Ra describe time/space as "as complex and complete a system of illusions, dances, and pattern as is space/time and has as structured a system of what you may call natural laws". So what would be the temporal version of something like gravity, something that operates on our otherwise free traverse of space? In other words, it sounds like we don't just float about in time anymore than we now float about in space; instead, time appears to have some sort of topology or landscape we navigate as we remain constant spatially.
I'm out of ideas.