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Imagining the Tenth Dimension - A Book by Rob Bryanton
If you get lost after the fifth dimension, hang on until around 9:25 into the animation where a quick recap gets given and it all makes sense (I promise 8-p). I'm guessing weed may be of assistance too.
/mindfuck (unless of course you're Robert of course 8-D).
If you get lost after the fifth dimension, hang on until around 9:25 into the animation where a quick recap gets given and it all makes sense (I promise 8-p). I'm guessing weed may be of assistance too.
/mindfuck (unless of course you're Robert of course 8-D).
Welcome to the Tenth Dimension
(...) Most of us have gotten used to the idea of there being four dimensions: but how can we possibly imagine the tenth? This project starts from the unique argument that time really is the fourth spatial dimension. This "new way of thinking about time and space" is not the traditional position of mainstream science (which says that time is not a full dimension, but rather a quality that is overlaid on the other three dimensions of space to create "spacetime"). Still, many people feel this new idea has resonances with their own ways of understanding reality.
Preamble
The "theory of reality" that I advance on this website and in the book "Imagining the Tenth Dimension" is not the one that is commonly accepted by today's physicists. Anyone wanting to know more about the currently established thinking behind string theory, physics, and cosmology should refer to such excellent books as "The Trouble with Physics" by Lee Smolin, "Parallel Worlds" by Michio Kaku, "The Fabric of the Cosmos" by Brian Greene, or "Warped Passages" by Lisa Randall.