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Originally Posted by humility
If you imagine space-time as almost having two extremes of dimensionality. i.e one extreme being only the dimensions of space, and the other extreme being only the time dimension. I say almost because space-time can't become either of these extremes because then it wouldn't be space-time. So these two almost extremes are the edges of space-time and the universe of studiable phenomena since we are space-time objects.
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I suspect you have never taken any algebra nor physics classes. Space-Time as defined by Minkowski &
Einstein is of four dimensions (x, y, z, t), where the first three are spatial dimension and time (t) is a
scalar dimension. They are different as evidence by the fact they are of different quantities
(i.e. "Meters" vs "Seconds"), so you convert to like terms by multiplying time by c (speed of light).
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Originally Posted by humility
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I didn't even bother to really quote the next part. External forces to space-time... ???
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Originally Posted by humility
... as an induced effect in space-time force . And I believe that gravity is the effect induced at the other extremity of space-time. So energy and gravity are effects in space-time induced from non space-time sources.
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Space-Time is not a force induced or otherwise. Spacetime is a coordinate reference system relative
to an observer. You draw your worldlines of causality from your (observer) current locality and move
out.
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Originally Posted by humility
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More unintelligable statements.
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Originally Posted by humility
I believe that this theory does agree with most of relativity and quantum physics.
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I am glad you
"believe" there is aggreement, though I do not see how your collection of
statements form any kind of theory in any case.
Maddog