It's been a very long time since I developed any new concepts to add to A Simple Explanation, spending the past couple of years concentrating instead on the Gnostic Gospel. So my longtime readers may be very happy to see this new posting featuring the torus, consciousness, and Jello?
Yesterday my brother and I were musing over the nature of time--what is it exactly? It isn't a thing, it is nowhere to be located. Is it therefore a force? This was my response. I have long thought of the universe in this fashion, but I've never written it down or even shared it with my brother until yesterday. He flipped out over it. Let's see what you think...
A Giant Bowl of
Jello
Here is how I picture time, space, and consciousness —
- We live in a Jello universe--a gigantic, torus-shaped, bowl
of gelatin, studded with an infinite number of cherries.
- The Jello is the matrix that holds everything that ever was or will be.
- The cherries are every thing that ever were or will be--all potential events, all potential objects. An infinite array of cherries already laid out as potential.
- Consciousness is each spark of life making its way through this vast ocean of Jello.
- Time can only be apprehended through consciousness; time is
nowhere to be found if there is no observer.
- The cherries are the full panoply of choices we could make
along the way.
- Our free will chooses to swim this way and that as it moves toward
the next cherry of choice. This free will is swimming from the middle of the
torus in the direction of the outside boundary of the giant torus. All of these
cherries are being held within the shape of the torus—the doughy part of the
donut.
- Every lifetime is the trace of the worm-like path our
consciousness chooses as it travels through the universe of cherries.
- In a real sense, the entirety of all of our lives is already conceived in potential. It is our self-awareness and free will that plod along at the speed of matter as we live our lives out as a linearity of passing time.
My brother, the professor of Philosophy, notes that this way of looking at time and consciousness may have just solved one of the longstanding conundrums of philosophy. That is, how can we reconcile the concept of an all-knowing God if we subjects have free will? The answer presented by this model is that the all-knowing God has pre-placed all possible choices before us, but it is our individual free will that plots the course through these choices. This combination of potential versus choice reflects our free will.
That's it.
Of course, the Jello salad pictured above is not to scale. The gelatin donut would be infinitely large, and the cherries relatively small.
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