Timewave zero & Fractal Time
2012 Timewave zero & Fractal Time Software developed by Peter Meyer & Terence Mckenna
https://archive.org/details/twz_win_4.3
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Timewave zero & Fractal Time
2012 Timewave zero & Fractal Time Software developed by Peter Meyer & Terence Mckenna
https://archive.org/details/twz_win_4.3
"Ancient traditions viewed time as a never-ending dance of cycles great waves of energy that pulse across the universe, linking the past and the future in their journey. Modern science [- economy, technology, politics, geology, history, public health, meteorology, ...-] seems to agree. In the language of physics, time merges with the space it travels through to create space-time, ripples in the quantum ocean that makes the universe possible. A growing body of evidence suggests that time's waves, and the history within them, repeat as cycles within cycles. As each new cycle begins, it carries the same conditions as the past, but with a greater intensity. It's this fractal time that becomes the events of the universe and life.
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When we understand what the darkness of our cycle means and why it's necessary, we begin to see the great challenges of our time in a new light. With that light, our moment in history and our response to the changes that come with it take on new meaning. With these ideas in mind, it becomes even clearer that now is the best time for us to go through such a cycle. The reason is that now is the first time we have the understanding, the need, and the technology to reach into the realm of all possibilities and choose the kind of future that will arise from the chaos of the present. This is something that would have been impossible even 50 years ago."
- Fractal Time, Gregg Braden
Simultaneous Time, Synchronicity, Finite, Infinity, God and Us, Now, Then and When
Simultaneous Time, Synchronicity, Finite, Infinity, God and Us, Now, Then and When
Time is not linear, stationary nor immutable. Time is all around us at the moment we perceive our “now.” Our science and quantum physics play onour sense of past, present and future; so do our calendars and our birthdays. Daily we tap into our sense of time with our alarm clocks, scheduled TV shows, and numerous appointments throughout the day. Yet, our earthly finite is born from the Creator’s…
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Lenticular Clouds, Fractal Time.
Lenticular Clouds - Fractal Time
Another Time
How long does it take to tell a story? Since a story varies from telling to telling, there is no set time that it takes. Parts of the story are lost and others added. Different versions multiply like genomes.
If we think of the cosmos as being made out of something more along the lines of stories, then space and time can be considered an afterthought, just another part of the story that got added at some point and became the basis for a whole host of quantitative stories about matter and motion.
Without any tiny creatures on tiny planets, there is nothing to slow down the intergalactic story from it's native rate. Galaxies may flush themselves down the astronomical drain as fast as a whirlpool in the sink spins out to us but the perceptual frame it relates to runs at 'eons per second'. Our human stories exist on an entirely different scale.
Rather than thinking of the universe as one gigantic story that starts with the Big Band, another way of looking at it is as nested stories within stories, branching ever deeper into dividing the moment of the singularity. It's like Groundhog Day, but each time the universe cycles through it gets more elaborately fractal - more and more time is created within each story, within which smaller stories proliferate. What we read as expansion is actually the cosmos perpetually falling into miniaturization.