TJ McCaustland Posted December 8, 2015 Author Posted December 8, 2015 ... but not making it better. In fact, while it may help you, it makes it more confusing for everyone else. That violates a basic tenet of science. You're supposed to aid understanding, not kidnap it and beat it into an unrecognizable mess. Ah. Very well then I will make it more understandable then since You asked.
andrewcellini Posted December 8, 2015 Posted December 8, 2015 This isn't rewriting physics, it's taking physics and adding to it. what have you added to physics?
uncool Posted December 9, 2015 Posted December 9, 2015 There is a 10-dimensional symmetry group in physics, the Poincare group. That's about the only 10 dimensional thing in Einsteinian relativity. And the Galilean version is also 10 dimensional.
TJ McCaustland Posted December 10, 2015 Author Posted December 10, 2015 what have you added to physics? Nothing as of yet but a twisted speculation with a tidbit of juicy goodness known as possibility There is a 10-dimensional symmetry group in physics, the Poincare group. That's about the only 10 dimensional thing in Einsteinian relativity. And the Galilean version is also 10 dimensional. Right, right, now that symmetry group is what I was getting at, so since the way dimensions affect the matter that exists on their planes kinda goes 4,5,6,7,8,9,10 are all the same (According to Swansont.) then with this symmetry I come back to my conjecture that the universe when defined by a single quantum state produces a point on a graph with infinite octagonal axes, supporting my OP that all matter exists in quantum state as one, and therefore is technically without dimensions because it is entangled with itself across all dimensions.
Strange Posted December 10, 2015 Posted December 10, 2015 Extraordinary. It is almost as if you don't know what the Poincaré group is.
Bill Angel Posted December 10, 2015 Posted December 10, 2015 then with this symmetry I come back to my conjecture that the universe when defined by a single quantum state produces a point on a graph with infinite octagonal axes, I believe that you meant orthogonal, not octagonal.
uncool Posted December 11, 2015 Posted December 11, 2015 Nothing as of yet but a twisted speculation with a tidbit of juicy goodness known as possibility Right, right, now that symmetry group is what I was getting at, so since the way dimensions affect the matter that exists on their planes kinda goes 4,5,6,7,8,9,10 are all the same (According to Swansont.) then with this symmetry I come back to my conjecture that the universe when defined by a single quantum state produces a point on a graph with infinite octagonal axes, supporting my OP that all matter exists in quantum state as one, and therefore is technically without dimensions because it is entangled with itself across all dimensions. This is absolute word salad. What do you think it means to say that something has n dimensions, where n is some positive integer?
swansont Posted December 11, 2015 Posted December 11, 2015 Right, right, now that symmetry group is what I was getting at, so since the way dimensions affect the matter that exists on their planes kinda goes 4,5,6,7,8,9,10 are all the same (According to Swansont.) What's that now? According to me? I don't think so.
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