These paradoxes are about infinity.
The Stone of God Paradox
I conclude with this challenge:
Let the God Almighty create a stone, which he is not capable of lifting!
The Fully Collapsable Bicycle Escape
If we had a sum particle that could collapse and fold itself into another sub-particle half its size then the remaining space would be freed, and we could maintain the original energy.
To answer the The Stone of God Paradox..
I conclude with this challenge:
Let the God Almighty create a stone, which he is not capable of lifting!
God then goes and makes a stone he cannot lift, but then because he can do all things he lifts it, and instead makes another, but again because God can do all things he lifts it.. ad infinitum.
God's nature is to be the Ein Sof, The Infinite, there is not a logical challenge that can challenge him.. I will explain.
I asked God for a bicycle that could collapse ad infinitum, God asked knowing the answer, but for the sake of personal satisfaction and time, to move time forward He asked 'If I give you such a bicycle, will you endeavour to kill me with it?' I answered 'of course not Lord'.
The bicycle appeared before me and I could make it as small as I wished, or even return it to normal size.
God asked knowing the answer, but for the sake of personal satisfaction and time, to move time forward He asked 'Why did you want the bicycle?' I answered 'to prove your glory Lord.'
The Lord was pleased and said 'I will share a secret with you..'
'The fact that a concept can exist in the minds of men does not mean that the sum of it exists within reality, only part, to ask for the concept of infinity, you ask for Me, so I allot a small portion of what something is within creation and call it that, what you call 'infinity' I call a 'moment' and share what that moment looks like, as a photograph is not the entirety of an existence but the illusion of thought, perception and understanding.. your idea of infinity is the same'
'Binding me to a concept, makes only further your fallibility, and further away from the correctness of thought, for example..
If I was locked in a room made by men, using the sum of genius of all ages and I said to the room 'be undone' it would be undone.'
'This is why your bicycle is important..
Like Me, it cannot be made into a conformed concept, as it has no limit to his collapse and so can escape reality, as the bicycle is not part of anything you understand, it was not made by men.'
Saturday, 27 May 2017
The Grandfather Paradox vs The Self Publishing Moral (Escape)
The Grandfather Paradox vs The Self Publishing Moral
Given that all things inside a paradox are equal and that entropy cannot exist, how then can human fallible consciousness exist?
Prose: like the hamster on the wheel, the human consciousness goes forth without knowledge of itself.
Given that all things inside a paradox are not equal, as shown with the Clockwork Paradox, which means entropy must exist, then it is inevitable that the human moral consciousness would eventually exit the scenario.
Prose: A human would become disgusted with their own existence and so avoid becoming their own grandfather.
No matter how many times, the same person gave into the lustful and self-determinate desires, within the paradox, eventually, entropy would catch up to them even inside the paradox.
Question: How can this be when the energy is identical?
Given that the Big Bang is the beginning and this paradox take place at a later date, time is still an external force and not central as supposed, a paradox is more like the eye of a storm in time rather than a hamster wheel that time does not tell to stop.
I'll explain..
Every existence has a 'sum of morals' good bad bannal exciting, that begins with life and ends with death. If a moral can never be published, due to time cycling indefinitely, time cannot escape to further the existence of creation past the point of the cycle. What I'm saying is, it would be the end of the universe.. dramatic yes. I don't feel I am explaining this well..
Imagine while creating a paradox you also undid it..
Imagine there is a robot at the end of time, they decided that their existence has been too long, they go back and destroy the robot that created them, but in doing so they wiped out their existence and so they did not come back to destroy the robot that created them, and so they did exist and come back.. and so on..
Time is a lot like nature in many respects, if harnessed by an individual through their own perception, time behaves naturally, but if harnessed by a machine the nature of time becomes violent and unpredictable. Creation is built upon the principle of consequence, if you remove consequence, you remove the moral imperative for time to behave as you would expect. And given that time publishes consequence like humans publish morals, changing the natural order of things would not guarantee 'a hamster on a wheel'.
Given that all things inside a paradox are equal and that entropy cannot exist, how then can human fallible consciousness exist?
Prose: like the hamster on the wheel, the human consciousness goes forth without knowledge of itself.
Given that all things inside a paradox are not equal, as shown with the Clockwork Paradox, which means entropy must exist, then it is inevitable that the human moral consciousness would eventually exit the scenario.
Prose: A human would become disgusted with their own existence and so avoid becoming their own grandfather.
No matter how many times, the same person gave into the lustful and self-determinate desires, within the paradox, eventually, entropy would catch up to them even inside the paradox.
Question: How can this be when the energy is identical?
Given that the Big Bang is the beginning and this paradox take place at a later date, time is still an external force and not central as supposed, a paradox is more like the eye of a storm in time rather than a hamster wheel that time does not tell to stop.
I'll explain..
Every existence has a 'sum of morals' good bad bannal exciting, that begins with life and ends with death. If a moral can never be published, due to time cycling indefinitely, time cannot escape to further the existence of creation past the point of the cycle. What I'm saying is, it would be the end of the universe.. dramatic yes. I don't feel I am explaining this well..
Imagine while creating a paradox you also undid it..
Imagine there is a robot at the end of time, they decided that their existence has been too long, they go back and destroy the robot that created them, but in doing so they wiped out their existence and so they did not come back to destroy the robot that created them, and so they did exist and come back.. and so on..
Time is a lot like nature in many respects, if harnessed by an individual through their own perception, time behaves naturally, but if harnessed by a machine the nature of time becomes violent and unpredictable. Creation is built upon the principle of consequence, if you remove consequence, you remove the moral imperative for time to behave as you would expect. And given that time publishes consequence like humans publish morals, changing the natural order of things would not guarantee 'a hamster on a wheel'.
Friday, 26 May 2017
The Bootstrap Paradox vs The Mirror Shard Escape
The Bootstrap Paradox vs The Mirror Shard Escape
The Bootstrap Paradox
John owns a time machine, he decides to go back in time and meet his musical hero. Once he arrives, he finds out his musical hero did not exist, and in fact it was he, whom wrote the music he loves.
Question: Where did the music originally come from?
Prose: he had always invented it.
The Mirror Shard Escape
Part 1
John owns a time machine, he decides to go back in time and meet his musical hero. Once he arrives, he finds his musical hero's parents, and accidentally kills him much earlier in his life, by injuring his parent/s. He recreates the music and publishes it under the name of his musical hero. He continues his existence, never returning to that time and place, for fear of disrupting what he put right. However, he copies one of the notes incorrectly, which leads to his time machine not existing. Time resets.
Part 2
John owns a time machine, he decides to go back in time and meet his musical hero. Once he arrives, he finds out his musical hero did not exist, and in fact it was he, whom wrote the music he loves.
This is The Clockwork Paradox used to escape The Bootstrap Paradox, and so called a new name, The Mirror Shard Escape.
Paradoxes are quite violent things, they pretend to be elegant self-contained engines, when they are more like as a black hole is to gravity, a paradox is to time.
Paradoxes CAN be escaped, but are so difficult given the conditions.
The Bootstrap Paradox
John owns a time machine, he decides to go back in time and meet his musical hero. Once he arrives, he finds out his musical hero did not exist, and in fact it was he, whom wrote the music he loves.
Question: Where did the music originally come from?
Prose: he had always invented it.
The Mirror Shard Escape
Part 1
John owns a time machine, he decides to go back in time and meet his musical hero. Once he arrives, he finds his musical hero's parents, and accidentally kills him much earlier in his life, by injuring his parent/s. He recreates the music and publishes it under the name of his musical hero. He continues his existence, never returning to that time and place, for fear of disrupting what he put right. However, he copies one of the notes incorrectly, which leads to his time machine not existing. Time resets.
Part 2
John owns a time machine, he decides to go back in time and meet his musical hero. Once he arrives, he finds out his musical hero did not exist, and in fact it was he, whom wrote the music he loves.
This is The Clockwork Paradox used to escape The Bootstrap Paradox, and so called a new name, The Mirror Shard Escape.
Paradoxes are quite violent things, they pretend to be elegant self-contained engines, when they are more like as a black hole is to gravity, a paradox is to time.
Paradoxes CAN be escaped, but are so difficult given the conditions.
The Clockwork Time Paradox Theory aka .. The Clockwork Paradox
The Clockwork Paradox
Time Begins;
Upon striking midnight time continues its motion until 1am, once upon 1am, it strikes solitary and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Time Begins;
Upon midnight time continues its motion until 1am, upon one 1am, it strikes 5 times shatters the bell and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Time Begins;
Upon striking midnight time continues its motion until 1am, once upon 1am, it strikes solitary and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Time Begins;
Upon midnight time continues its motion until 1am, upon one 1am, it strikes 5 times shatters the bell and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Question, if you were the bell, How would you know you were struck only once in one revolution of time and shattered in the other?
A self fulfilling paradox that eats itself, but has no knowledge of ever being eaten.
Part 1
John owns a time machine, he goes to Greg's shop to buy some apples, the apples poison him, he goes back to his time machine and gets inside and goes to Jane, who died a year earlier, Jane is smart with poisons, she cures John, John decides that it was sad that Jane died, so he takes her to see her mother before she died. Jane's mother was so surprised to see Jane all grown up she died of a heart attack. Jane was very angry. While John slept she used his time machine to poison some apples for John and put them in a shop. When John awoke, he found some poison on the table of his time machine, he was shocked, but feared for his life so decided to kill Jane. He put the poison in her food then goes back in time to change the owner of the shop to one with higher morals. This loses him the time machine.
Prose: Jane caused her own death without the ability to remember it.
Prose 2 : John killed Jane.
Part 2
John owns a time machine, he goes to Marci's fruit shop to buy some apples, he enjoys the apples. he goes back to his time machine and gets inside and goes to see Jane, who died a year earlier, Jane is smart and attractive with curves John likes, John decides that it was sad that Jane died, so he takes her to see her mother before she died. Jane's mother was so surprised to see Jane all grown up she died of a heart attack. Jane was very sad. While John half slept Jane seduced him and conceived a child. Jane had the child while John slept, setting the time machine nine months in advance. When John awoke, he found he was a father, he was shocked, but very happy with Jane. They call the baby 'Greg' and put him up for adoption. He goes on to own a Fruit shop.
Prose : they have no memory of killing each other.
Time Begins;
Upon striking midnight time continues its motion until 1am, once upon 1am, it strikes solitary and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Time Begins;
Upon midnight time continues its motion until 1am, upon one 1am, it strikes 5 times shatters the bell and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Time Begins;
Upon striking midnight time continues its motion until 1am, once upon 1am, it strikes solitary and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Time Begins;
Upon midnight time continues its motion until 1am, upon one 1am, it strikes 5 times shatters the bell and returns to twelve, time has restarted and the clock has no memory of being at 1am. = time travel.
Question, if you were the bell, How would you know you were struck only once in one revolution of time and shattered in the other?
A self fulfilling paradox that eats itself, but has no knowledge of ever being eaten.
Part 1
John owns a time machine, he goes to Greg's shop to buy some apples, the apples poison him, he goes back to his time machine and gets inside and goes to Jane, who died a year earlier, Jane is smart with poisons, she cures John, John decides that it was sad that Jane died, so he takes her to see her mother before she died. Jane's mother was so surprised to see Jane all grown up she died of a heart attack. Jane was very angry. While John slept she used his time machine to poison some apples for John and put them in a shop. When John awoke, he found some poison on the table of his time machine, he was shocked, but feared for his life so decided to kill Jane. He put the poison in her food then goes back in time to change the owner of the shop to one with higher morals. This loses him the time machine.
Prose: Jane caused her own death without the ability to remember it.
Prose 2 : John killed Jane.
Part 2
John owns a time machine, he goes to Marci's fruit shop to buy some apples, he enjoys the apples. he goes back to his time machine and gets inside and goes to see Jane, who died a year earlier, Jane is smart and attractive with curves John likes, John decides that it was sad that Jane died, so he takes her to see her mother before she died. Jane's mother was so surprised to see Jane all grown up she died of a heart attack. Jane was very sad. While John half slept Jane seduced him and conceived a child. Jane had the child while John slept, setting the time machine nine months in advance. When John awoke, he found he was a father, he was shocked, but very happy with Jane. They call the baby 'Greg' and put him up for adoption. He goes on to own a Fruit shop.
Prose : they have no memory of killing each other.
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