What property of space, time or matter makes the universe threedimensionally?
On May 5, 10:11 pm, Thomas Heger wrote:
Smooth John schrieb:
Very often physicists with reputation never ask
uncomfortable question, which they dont like.
As is, what property of space, time or matter
makes the universe three dimensionally?
It must be the matter, because time and space
are rather mental construction, I mean, this can
be proved, that these are, and only are, mental
construction. Moreover, matter is considered as
being energy in many groups. Energy again, is
not well posed. What is going on here? Why are
they telling us that we live in three dimensions?
Are we sure we live in a three dimensional manifold,
where 3D relativity holds good in its domain of
applicability? What proofs do we have in hand?
Why are there three dimensions of space?
Maybe you trust me about one dimension of time. That would follow from
causality. Now imagine: what is time to me is space to you. It's the
question of the point of view. I have mine and you have yours, but both
are equivalent.
Now imagine cells in time-like manner arranged, and you have only one
dimension. Then there are neighbors, doing the same. The neighboring
cells are the 'evils' and our own bread are the 'good'. Now you have to
have *any* direction through this arrangement with these features. There
is only one topology that could provide this: the anti commutative ring
of quaternions.
Those quaternions have three spatial neighbors and one temporal. Only
quaternions you can arrange in such a way, that my time is your space.
And those have three spatial and one temporal neighbor
Thomas Heger
quaternions are representation. I asked about what property, matter
likely, because it needs space to move in.
In fact atoms easily may exist in plane. We think it is space, but it
is a
surface where all we detect makes sense. Even time travel now makes
sense.
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