Transfer of Energy Through Time and Coupling
of Parallel Universes
(Date: unknown; Source: Matrix III)
Leading Edge Research, P.O. Box 481-MU58, Washington State,
C.F. 98597 C.F
V: Would you explain your theories about time and energy?
H: When I was in France, I was part of a group looking into
theories of entropy states and the general thermodynamics of
plasmas. The natural rate of entropy increase in a closed system
defines the flow of what is perceived as time. We were trying to
develop a better insight into the process of synchronization
between apparently uncoupled systems, in other words to explain
how time manages to flow at the same rate in different parts of
the universe. We ended up deriving a set of mathematical
expressions that interrelated entropy functions, quantum energy
states, and spacetime coordinates of quantum events. In
particular, certain variables that could be interpreted as time
and energy turned out to be covariant.
V: Do you mean there was some kind of equivalence
relationship?
H: Not quite. But you could almost think of it in that way. It
meant that the universe could be represented by an ensemble of
"events', each characterized by a set of energy states and
spacetime numbers; nothing more. In such a representation of the
universe, the idea of conservation of mass-energy did not hold;
it was replaced by a conservation of the product of that quantity
with spacetime. By means of math transforms, it was possible to
transform one universe into another in which the quantity varied
inversely with the other. If you made all the spatial variables
constant, the spacetime functions reduced to pure time; you could
transform energy to time and vice versa. We had no idea at that
time what that meant.
V: What did it eventually mean?
H: What it seemed to say was that energy could be extracted
from the universe, which is where ordinary conservation breaks
down, and injected into another version of that universe in which
the time coordinates of all the 'events" were shifted by
some amount. The more energy you transformed, the greater the
time shift would be. If that was interpreted as taking place
within the same universe, it seemed to suggest that-energy could
be transferred through time. We must conclude that all versions
of the universe in which we exist, interpreted linearly as
"Past", "future" etc. are equally real. Thus
we have a continuum. The only model I can think of is a complex
serial one in which altering the events in a past universe
affects not only the future of that particular universe as it
evolves in time, but also the "presents" of all the
other universes that lie ahead of it. In other words, there is a
mechanism of casual connection through the continuum that the
simple serial model does not address.
V: Could you expand on that concept?
H: Everything we have discovered so far seems to add up to two
things. First, the universe that we see around us and which forms
part of us is simply one of many, equally real universes that
appear to be strung sequentially along a single timeline. Second,
events that happen in this universe affect not only its
"future", but the situations in all the other universes
that lie ahead of it. That,-of course, suggests a continuity
throughout the system; the "future" universes ahead of
us form a progression of states that are evolving from the
present state. We need to ask ourselves what the mechanism is
that provides that continuity. That same mechanism will enable an
event in one universe to alter events in another universe. The
continuity follows from the fact that objects, being mass, don't
vanish; they endure in time.
V: Unless, of course, they are deliberately withdrawn from the
coordinates they occupy.
H: Yes. Mass arranges itself into different patterns to
produce the changes we associate with the passage of time, but in
doing so it provides the connection and continuity that enables
one universe to evolve from another. For example, if a candle has
burned down, in the universe "behind" us it is still
intact; in the universe ahead it probably does not exist at all
in that form. The whole candle is the sum of all of them. I have
a drawing here that will assist in an explanation. Try thinking
of a two-dimensional analogy. Imagine that the universe is flat
and everything it contains is flat. Now form a solid continuum by
stacking an infinite number of zerothickness planes like that
together, like the pages of an infinitely thick book. Every page
is one universe. Mass continues through these pages in a
thread-like manner. Anybody inside one of those universes will
see mass patterns change sequentially.
Look at the diagram I drew. Each universe consists of a space
containing objects and inhabitants that are all made up of
particles, or at least that is what it looks like if you happen
to live inside one of them.
We, in our privelaged position as superobservers looking in
from the outside, can see that every particle of mass is really
an infinitesimally thin slice of a thread that passes through all
the universes. As the universe moves along the threads in some
kind of supertime, the particles or slices appear to move through
space. That gives a visible rate of change that is observed as ..
normal time" within the universe. From our position we can
see that all the universes are equally real, only the one that
you happen to be part of and moving with gives the illusion of
appearing more real to you then the rest of them.
V: So you would be able to send signals or transport mass from
one universe to the other.
H: Exactly.
V: If you send a signal from one universe to another which
changes an event pattern, I assume that the memory of having a
reason to change that event is erased as soon as the event is
changed?
H: Yes, because our memories consist of electrochemical and
DNA pattern changes. Everything that formed any record of the
original pattern was reset. Hence, our memories are consistent
with the new pattern that now exists. In actuality, causes and
effects exist not on a series on a unidirectional time line, but
the system is dynamic in that time loops exist, and these loops
make it possible, in effect, for effects to be detected before
the cause of the effect exists.
V: I think the holographic model of the universe would explain
it, because of the interconnectedness of everything through
hyperspacial formats. The superobserver that you are talking
about is in fact consciousness itself - all wave and particle
interchanges are, in actuality, consciousness as viewed from
different perspectives. Access to what are perceived as different
"spacetime" coordinates can ultimately be accomplished
through the manipulations of consciousness, so any devices that
are devised to accomplish this purpose simply mimic the mental
operations in consciousness of more evolved beings. There are
many transitionary instances where alien equipment is tuned to
the specific patterns of a particular being, and the equipment
functions as a modulator or transductor of consciousness. Time
flow, as you mention it, applies within certain boundaries, and
everything hyperspacial to those boundaries functions in terms of
that which makes up the conceptual loops that you speak of. All
in all, it makes for an interesting discussion.