19 March 2010

Notes & a full Draft of Scene 11: Chapter 4

          Mid-morning, and a fellow from Handyman Connections is working on the effects of squirrel mischief near the northeast side of the roof. Below is Doug's response to your note.

Sent: Fri, Mar 19, 2010 9:10 am
Subject: Re: physics

Dick,
I don't know if I can help you here. Energy is defined as a force times distance. It actually is a vector product so that if the distance moved is at right angles to the force there is no work done, i.e. no energy is used. In this case you may observe a change in direction say of an electron spiraling in a magnet field that requires no energy to accomplish. Very strange indeed.

Another definition is that energy is the ability to do work so what would negative energy which is 75% of our universe represent? When you think about the creation of a photon which is solely an energy packet, what has happened at the moment of creation of the photon? Oscillating E and H fields appear from nowhere and the photon travels at the speed of light which means its clock runs at zero. That is the photon never ages no matter how long it takes to go from A to B.

Good luck with your problem but a rotation of 90 degrees may solve your problem.

Regards
Doug

**
         You have been busy with company wanted to see Owen and the contractor who fixed the near roof problem, painted and looks fine, and he fixed the garage door too. Kim is feeding Owen, Carol is talking to Amy next door, and you are on the MacBook. Check your emails. We can work from what Doug has sent above so relax on that. Five Guys for a later lunch. All for now, boy. – Amorella.
         Waiting at Kroger on Tylersville and Cox while Carol and Kim pick up essentials. Keep the notes out for reference and let’s work on scene eleven.
         Home. You finished the scene and can now post it, at least as a first draft. You asked Doug to read it over. And, assuredly he will be credited in book four for his help. I will help you word it at that time.
         Doug just sent you a reply to the scene, here it is:
Dick,
Thanks for the honor of being a credit. . . .Scene 11 reads fine to me. You have some inspirational imagination!
Doug
         I am relieved that he understands it well and I feel much better about it.
                                                   Scene 11

         The Supervisor rarely uses more energy than needed at any given moment. SheanHe is nearly the ultimate conscious creation in efficient thought and in resolving the said thought into processing the earliest appropriate probable response possible given HeranHis widely enhanced parameters which is the semi-encased tree filament of thought and light.

         Light is as thought without a thinker therefore thought is first. Thought includes the processes of cognition, sentience, consciousness, ideas and imagination and also according to Wikipedia, light is a type of energy, a non-matter, which exhibits the properties of both waves and particles.

         Cognition is a product of the thinking process; sentience is a sensation, a conscious awareness; consciousness is an awareness of self and facts of existence; ideas are formulated thoughts; and imagination is a mental image based on logic, that the basis in here. Energy is force times distance; non-matter is an absence of matter; waves are formulations; and particles are quantities. That’s how I, the Narrator, sees it. These then are the properties of the tree of thought and light balanced by the middle lantern-like sleeve of surrounding thought.

         Another definition of energy says it is the ability to do work. What then of negative energy which constitutes seventy-five percent of our universe? Depending on its angle, no work is done, no power is presented, even though it exists. These are present hypotheses. Nevertheless, the energy in the formulation of the Tree of Thought and Light is based solely on Presence not Power.

         Thought into light begins with the cognition of oscillating E and H fields in the birth of a photon that travels at the speed of light but the sentience of the photon’s clock speed runs at zero. The photon never ages no matter how long it takes to go from A to B. For example a human being who is born totally blind may still develop sensations of the awareness of light through the sensitivity of one or more of the other four senses.

        A totally blind person gaining a suntan on the beach can still sense the sun when it is not obscured by a cloud or by differentiating between light and day through the natural sounds (or the lack of sounds) of particular insects or birds. The human brain is a very impressive organ in terms of the amount of adaptively and compensation it can provide for the sake of an individual’s survival. The same is true for Impenetrable Thought, a singular seemingly supranatural-like process through which photons can be formed, rooted and released, at least in these books it is.

         The point being, there is much more to Reality than meets the eye, the brain, and even the mind, be it embodied in the Living or the Dead.

***  end of scene




          The next scene is a return to the three Fates of old. The focus is the separation, their view of Reality, as compared with The Supervisor’s. You are immediately reminded of the famous story told about Albert Einstein when he was in early high school equivalent in Germany. He appeared to be day-dreaming and his teacher asked what was on his mind and Albert replied, ‘I wonder what it is like to ride on a wave of light’ or something to that effect.
         I always wondered about that. I like to think, ‘what would it be like to be . . . the three Fates, as an example, since that is the subject. They are not beholden to Zeus, and certainly not to humans. The only one I suppose would be Hecate, but I am not sure on that. The Greeks did think things out and made them relative in a literal sense, as  so and so was someone else’s mother or grandmother or the like. Pretty neat thinking actually. Certainly it was more understandable to me than the Apostles’ Creed, for instance.
         And, at least in science, people admit errors when they find out the facts are different than what was thought. For instance, yesterday NASA stated:
NASA Science News for March 18, 2010
Researchers who once confidently stated that the Moon was bone-dry are now thinking the unthinkable: The Moon has so much water, there's actually a "lunar hydrosphere." International spacecraft have recently discovered no fewer than three "flavors" of moonwater and no one knows when the discoveries will end.


         Twenty years ago if someone said the Moon had water on or in it I would have said they were crazy. In fact, I would have put my life on the line in defense of the Moon being completely dry. Who would have thought. This is what is wonderful to me about science, people keep compiling the facts as they learn them to be so. Doubt is accepted and needed for science to work. Doubt is a part of the process of learning. So tomorrow, I will experience the point of view of the Fates. It can help me to better understand any human’s point of view, at least to listen to it, whether I agree or not. Imagination can be a good thing, especially if it is used within reason, that is what I think and that is what I attempt to do in these notes and books. 

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