Alisima wrote:
Yes I agree. But infinity means outside of time and ubiguity means outside of space. Einstein was so smart to conclude that space and time where the same thing. But, like I said, we don't have a word for what is left when space and time are no more. Einstein made a hybrid with space and time and formed space/time or time/space, but language is still lagging behind: there is no hybrid word for infinity and ubiquity. Ofcourse one could always write infinity/ubiguity. My point is very subtle, and it is only about semantics. I didn't mean to say you were wrong, it were just the words that you used that were wrong.
I just said that you were wrong because I used to do voiceover, and one of my character's saying was, "You're wrong pal!", so I felt urged to say it, hehe. Sorry. You're not wrong though. Infinity does exist outside of space, but it also exists within... You're right. There is no hybrid word for infinity, so that's why I created the word "Internal Factor" which combines everything!
Alisima wrote:
Do you mean that the world around us is governed by metrics while it is still contained in the infinity/ubiquity??
Here's an easy way of seeing it. Even though the world is governed by metrics, which is time, space, distance, depth, height, weight, etc. - all that stuff you find in Algebra, something always exists on the outside. Take a blank piece of paper. This is the "Internal Factor". Then put a dot on the paper. You have now created something that has some metrics to it, but even though that small dot has metrics to it, it still exists on the blank piece of paper, which is the "material" that is used to create the dot. So the "Internal Factor" is never 'Nothing' but IS something, and that something has to exist everywhere! Even though time exists around us, it has to be contained within something, and that container has to be contained within something etc.