petrushkagoogol Posted October 15, 2019 Report Posted October 15, 2019 (edited) If you consider human beings as 5 dimensional entitiesTime as usual Space 3Audio longitudinal waves converted into transverse waves on a separate axis Humans can be treated as space-time keys for their dependent keys (man for kids)! All keys are required to describe the human domain up to a point in time. Does this encapsulate the HUMAN ACTIVITY USE CASE IN THE SPACE-TIME CONTINUUM? Edited October 15, 2019 by petrushkagoogol Quote
exchemist Posted October 15, 2019 Report Posted October 15, 2019 Christ! They're all out tonight. Suppose we're getting close to Hallowe'en. Quote
Vmedvil2 Posted October 15, 2019 Report Posted October 15, 2019 If you consider human beings as 5 dimensional entitiesTime as usualSpace 3Audio longitudinal waves converted into transverse waves on a separate axis Humans can be treated as space-time keys for their dependent keys (man for kids)!All keys are required to describe the human domain up to a point in time. Does this encapsulate the HUMAN ACTIVITY USE CASE IN THE SPACE-TIME CONTINUUM? Dude, you always post nonsense. Quote
petrushkagoogol Posted October 16, 2019 Author Report Posted October 16, 2019 Christ! They're all out tonight. Suppose we're getting close to Hallowe'en. What I'm trying to say is that human or alien lifeforms distort their local spacetime infinitesimally (~0) but anything that is not zero is statistically significant. Quote
exchemist Posted October 16, 2019 Report Posted October 16, 2019 What I'm trying to say is that human or alien lifeforms distort their local spacetime infinitesimally (~0) but anything that is not zero is statistically significant.That bears no relation to what you said originally. Quote
Vmedvil2 Posted October 16, 2019 Report Posted October 16, 2019 (edited) What I'm trying to say is that human or alien lifeforms distort their local spacetime infinitesimally (~0) but anything that is not zero is statistically significant.Yes they actually do because of mass but anything with mass does but very little as our mass is very little. You are moving your mass's distortion as you move around. Edited October 16, 2019 by VictorMedvil petrushkagoogol 1 Quote
petrushkagoogol Posted October 16, 2019 Author Report Posted October 16, 2019 Yes they actually do because of mass but anything with mass does but very little as our mass is very little. You are moving your mass's distortion as you move around.Even the CMBR undergoes gravitational lensing AFAIK Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.