A Very Brief History of Time

Einstein, Hawking and Black hole

Professor Gray

Someone smarter than you once concluded at the end of their esteemed human career as a famous Terra physicist that the past, present, and future all exist simultaneously. Not only did this concept bring him a since of immortality, as every moment is indelibly etched forever into the framework of infinity, but it guided his thought processes throughout his professional career.




By human standards, Albert Einstein was and continues to be in a real sense, a genius. His theoretical work has provided you with the fundamental underpinnings of every meaningful endeavor into the workings of the universe and to this day, the treatise into relativity and special relativity eclipses other human efforts of contemporary famous names such as Stephen Hawking.

Stephen hawking is most famous for his 1988 book, A brief History Of Time, however his career has thus far granted him more than a little professional accolade. In his book, which to the vulgar, will be his enduring legacy, he has done a fair job of explaining the sad limitations of human understanding of the universe, from ‘black holes’ to the ‘big bang’ and nobly takes credit for some charming yet laughably internally contradictory theory like the Black Hole Information Paradox.

I’ll just attempt to clear something up right now for you; the earth-centric concept of the big bang is a bit of a joke in the universe that I belong to. No matter how far back in time one may care to go (yes it is possible to go back in time; I know, I’m doing it) , the universe ‘looks’ the same age. Your thinking on the subject all seems to boil down to the limited notion that the speed of light is the top speed of the universe. I know that Einstein’s work gravitated around something like this concept, but in truth, what was being used for the purpose of his plurality of thought experiments was the accurate notion that what you call matter and energy is subject to a top speed due to the constraints of space-time resolution, and that this effect had an influence current notions of time and space.

Space is infinitely large, time has no logical beginning, and any area of space can be divided into an infinity of theoretical subdivisions, but for the purposes of materiality and form as you understand it, there must be indivisibles or no movement or form could exist. Matter and energy as you understand them are only able to exist within what is best described as a matrix of what could generally be described to you as ‘pixels’. The maximum resolution that can be achieved by any specific frequency range of matter (yes what you call matter is just a tiny bandwidth of material frequencies) is governed by these atomic units, which have been given the moniker of ‘plank length’. The same axiomatic applies to time, where the resolution of that degree of freedom is limited by this minimum frequency.

I can tell I have gone over too many heads. I recommend Ginko Biloba for that. Not only is it a superlative antioxidant herbal compound, especially in tincture form, but it improves circulation to the peripheries, like the fingers and more importantly in your specific case, the brain. I could list off more suggestions but seriously, too many of you are past salvation in that respect.

Professor Gray


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This entry was posted on Friday, April 30th, 2010 at 6:53 pm and is filed under Science. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

 

3 Responses to “A Very Brief History of Time”

  1. Fresh From Twitter: New post: Professor … | ufohq.org – The world's largest UFO news and information resource – updated live 24 X 7 X 365 Says:

    [...] New post: Professor Gray; A Very Brief History of Time http://www.ufo-disclosure.com/blog/a-very-brief-history-of-time/1051/ [...]

  2. Tweets that mention A Very Brief History of Time | UFO Disclosure -- Topsy.com Says:

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  3. Kieran Dayzero Says:

    Love it, great post [as usual]

    Also, Nassim Haramein has much to say on Planck distance, the stupidity
    of the big bang ‘theory’ and much much more…..highly brilliant and mis-under-estimated
    man that he is…..

    Linked Nassim 8-hr presentation here; [scroll down]

    http://kaleidascope-dayzero.blogspot.com/search/label/Nassim%20Haramein

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