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Time and Consciousness
Date: Sat, 03 Aug 2002 09:15:33 -0700
What is continually missing from consciousness theory is a useful concept of time. Time is a byproduct of consciousness.
Our sequential awareness adds one moment's observation onto the next in a continual stream that is converted by our brains into a holographic reflection of our sensory experience. This information is is continually stepped- down in energy and size while being stepped-up in speed. It is the same for everything everywhere in our universe. The consequence of this process is that each step is shared universally, so that the thoughts or memories in your mind have corollary values throughout the universe.
Think of each day as a thread of time being wound onto a spool that requires a day to make one revolution. Imagine that each turn is laid one on top of the other. Each turn is like a level or a floor in a spherical building. Since the floors are wound around a center it can be experienced as a single floor from its beginning to its end, or you can use the elevator to move from one floor to the next.
The elevator exists as a line between any external point and the center of the spherical "building of mind". Each level or stop on the "elevator" represents a different, but harmonious, stepped-down or up value. Each holographic memory level of this building of mind can be accessed horizontally or vertically. I will expand on this idea to explain consciousness time travel in another post.
Using the Its Like a Road analogy, we can think of using the same road everyday to go to work. and consequently being in the same place at the same time everyday, Memory, time and consciousness converge in the present and it is the choice of the being to be aware of their place in time. |
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The ability of space to automatically reduce incoming values toward a point is responsible for our perception of time. This ability of space is not unique to conscious beings, but is in fact responsible for them. The by-product of this process is time.
The universal experience of consciousness exists at the moment of shared creation, a moment built on the sequence of events begun 13.6 billion years ago. This moment is the continual unfolding of our universe, but all that has been continues to exist in space/time and can be accessed through the elevator of memory and mind.
The values of each moment of creation exist in permanent relationship throughout the universe. All memory is related to the values explained by the "building of mind" analogy.
Time is the product of the creative process in which new parts are added to an existing structure. You cannot separate time from the structure any more than you can separate a building from the space in which it exists.
Time and memory are inextricably entwined by the processes of space.
Time can be understood as the shifting of values, or stepping-down of values in space on a universal scale. Mind utilizes this process to maintain a continuous linkage between what has happened and what is happening. The values used by the consciousness exist universally and can be used to access any moment in time, anywhere in the universe.
Remote viewing anyone?
Dane Michael Arr August 3rd, 2002 Tempe AZ
The above post appeared (A copy of this message was also been posted to the following newsgroups: alt.consciousness, alt.consciousness.mysticism,sci.cognitive) I recieved a reply from KeithC.
In article <4f3a72c4.0208041154.526f3f12@posting.google.com>, choqueke@yahoo.com (KeithC) wrote:
> danearr@fastq.com wrote in message news:<danearr-0308020915310001@10.0.0.3>... > > What is continually missing from consciousness theory is a useful concept > > of time. > > > > Time is a byproduct of consciousness.... > > You presented some interesting ideas in your post. Are these your own > ideas or are they described in the literature?
Kieth
The concepts in the post reflect my own understanding derived from my work on SCIET Dynamics over the last twenty-eight years. If these ideas are described in the literature, I would like to know where and by who so that I might correspond with them. I would love to find someone else working on similar approaches.
The concept of time is the most difficult to convey of all the ideas in nature. Since time can only exist through the disappearance of the previous moment, it must be explained where that moment has disappeared to, and how it could possibly continue to exist, even in memory.
Moreover, it must be explained in the context of all other phenomena in a consistent manner, by which I mean that the same rules must be able to reproduce the other phenomena of nature.
I use a new mathematical form that I call the SCIET (single cycle integrative effect topology), which took about twenty years to develop along with the rules of space that allow it to explain natural phenomena. The core idea here is that a single mathematical cycle can be repeated on different centers, at different rates of change and with different originating energy levels to form the universe.
The main addition to concepts of space is the idea of dual Voids.
You have probably noticed that most natural laws are derived from the formulae to calculate the area of the surface of a sphere. This is one of the keys to SCIET Dynamics. The final result of each cycle is the formation of a spheric charge pattern, like a bubble. SCIET Dynamics consists of rules on how to step though the changes in space from a beginning point-to-point relationship to concluding spheric charge.
Can you imagine a spheric charge forming in the Void? This concept allows us to begin the universe with an external Void and an internal Void. Since the beginning there has been an equal amount of energy moving in both directions. Creation is in between the two Voids. Space is the result of the external dynamic and time is the result of the internal dynamic. Conciousness is the effect of the creative action (what we think of as the "present").
I hope that this helps answer your question.
Dane August 5, 2002
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