by kovil » Sun Apr 01, 2007 1:36 pm
In thinking this morning about your posting,
<<Which makes me ask the question: What does the universe actually look like right at this second? All those far off galaxies and stuff are not anywhere near where we see them because they've been moving for millions and billions of years. . .Yes. I mean that a galaxy we see 5 billion light years away obviously has moved. So where is everything right this second...those things are not where we see them obviously so where are they and what does the overall picture of the universe look like right now?>>
Ahh, the pureness of Idealism, unmuddied by the compromises which Space-Time imposes upon perceptions. Are you looking for instantaneous star charts, updated in realtime, with calculated vector analysis of personal intrinsics vs external intrinsics to show interception/collision-avoidance/arrival possibilities for navigational purposes, and, a need-to-know desirability arising from the curiosity of 'how does everything fit together in this universe'. I too would like to know where everything is. One solution in a psychological sense is to 'surrender' to allowing everything to be where it is and be warmly OK with things as they are, and trust like Dr Pangloss, that all will be well in this best of all possible worlds. This allows the freedom to do things, without worrying about things which are beyond my lifetime possibility of interacting with, or, over which I have no influence. Part of me wants to reach very far, much beyond the pragmatic sphere of influence I actually have. Thus is the 'human condition'. As I move thru this world and discover 'my power' (a-la Carlos Casteneda and the 'Don Juan' series of books) and how that relates to reality, a confidence and acceptance builds with discovery, that reaches from the inner mind to the outer limits.
The next step is, through surrender, the intelligence which pervades the universe can be listened to and heard and conversed with. Where else do those inspirations of great depth come from out of the blue?
It must have been another poster, Hawkgirl, who was asking about 'How can we measure motion', is there something against which we can make an absolute reference to measure motion or acceleration. The universe answered yes, the border of our awareable universe; but the next response was to use what that 'border' manifests, Inertia ! If a gyroscope of sorts was made and connected with a computer memory to track its path on a galactic GPS for example, then by 'history' one would have a reference base to construct a 'baseline' for future reference.
Inertia is oriented to the shell of our awareable universe, as a Foucault Pendulum does its best to remain undisturbed in its relationship with that 'sphere'. Using Inertia/Momentum as the 'anchor' in the sea of space-time will create the universal reference grid to plot absolute motion against for all components within the system of perception.
A further thought was, we need more women in science. Your 'whole brain' approach to subjects is needed more than ever. One Googleing session discovered Amara Graps' website, she got involved in Helioseismology and participated in that effort some years ago. Next she was working on 'wavelets', which is a 'hologramatic approach' to problem solving. As each small element in a hologram contains a complete dataset of the entire hologram, beit a small scale representation of the whole, a wavelet likewise contains a dataset for the entire largescale structure. The widespread applications for wavelets is astounding.
Instead of getting caught up in fighting in the trenches of BBT vs Dobsonian Cosmology or the Standard Solar Model (SSM) vs the Electric Sun Model (ESM) for example, she went further and worked on leading edge investigations which would look directly into the heart of the matter, whatever that would turn out to be. Last I checked I do not know what she is doing now, besides teaching at the American University in Rome. She is someone I would do well to emulate.
In thinking this morning about your posting,
<<Which makes me ask the question: What does the universe actually look like right at this second? All those far off galaxies and stuff are not anywhere near where we see them because they've been moving for millions and billions of years. . .Yes. I mean that a galaxy we see 5 billion light years away obviously has moved. So where is everything right this second...those things are not where we see them obviously so where are they and what does the overall picture of the universe look like right now?>>
Ahh, the pureness of Idealism, unmuddied by the compromises which Space-Time imposes upon perceptions. Are you looking for instantaneous star charts, updated in realtime, with calculated vector analysis of personal intrinsics vs external intrinsics to show interception/collision-avoidance/arrival possibilities for navigational purposes, and, a need-to-know desirability arising from the curiosity of 'how does everything fit together in this universe'. I too would like to know where everything is. One solution in a psychological sense is to 'surrender' to allowing everything to be where it is and be warmly OK with things as they are, and trust like Dr Pangloss, that all will be well in this best of all possible worlds. This allows the freedom to do things, without worrying about things which are beyond my lifetime possibility of interacting with, or, over which I have no influence. Part of me wants to reach very far, much beyond the pragmatic sphere of influence I actually have. Thus is the 'human condition'. As I move thru this world and discover 'my power' (a-la Carlos Casteneda and the 'Don Juan' series of books) and how that relates to reality, a confidence and acceptance builds with discovery, that reaches from the inner mind to the outer limits. ;-)
The next step is, through surrender, the intelligence which pervades the universe can be listened to and heard and conversed with. Where else do those inspirations of great depth come from out of the blue?
It must have been another poster, Hawkgirl, who was asking about 'How can we measure motion', is there something against which we can make an absolute reference to measure motion or acceleration. The universe answered yes, the border of our awareable universe; but the next response was to use what that 'border' manifests, Inertia ! If a gyroscope of sorts was made and connected with a computer memory to track its path on a galactic GPS for example, then by 'history' one would have a reference base to construct a 'baseline' for future reference.
Inertia is oriented to the shell of our awareable universe, as a Foucault Pendulum does its best to remain undisturbed in its relationship with that 'sphere'. Using Inertia/Momentum as the 'anchor' in the sea of space-time will create the universal reference grid to plot absolute motion against for all components within the system of perception.
A further thought was, we need more women in science. Your 'whole brain' approach to subjects is needed more than ever. One Googleing session discovered Amara Graps' website, she got involved in Helioseismology and participated in that effort some years ago. Next she was working on 'wavelets', which is a 'hologramatic approach' to problem solving. As each small element in a hologram contains a complete dataset of the entire hologram, beit a small scale representation of the whole, a wavelet likewise contains a dataset for the entire largescale structure. The widespread applications for wavelets is astounding.
Instead of getting caught up in fighting in the trenches of BBT vs Dobsonian Cosmology or the Standard Solar Model (SSM) vs the Electric Sun Model (ESM) for example, she went further and worked on leading edge investigations which would look directly into the heart of the matter, whatever that would turn out to be. Last I checked I do not know what she is doing now, besides teaching at the American University in Rome. She is someone I would do well to emulate.