Metaphysical Inertia, The Color of Time, Chapter 9
SPECIFIC NOTE: This is perhaps the second most important chapter, or maybe even the most important chapter, for the "fictional" paper on metaphysical inertia, by which physics and metaphysics may have a linking method through formula. Perhaps this fictional formula isn't the way to go about it, but framing the question in this way could yield discoveries in this area. It's a framework to foment experimentation. The formula is explained in the "fictional" paper starting at timestamp 25:27.
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
33
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6
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When the Waters Opened Tongues, The Color of Time, Chapter 8
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
18
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Island in the Sky, The Color of Time, Chapter 6
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
16
views
The Russian Village in Niigata, The Color of Time, Chapter 7
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
16
views
The Pastor in the Woods, The Color of Time, Chapter 5
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
13
views
How Sneg Got His Name, The Color of Time, Chapter 4
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
16
views
Ajagara and the Tiger - The Color of Time, Chapter 3
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
13
views
How Hotaru Suzuki Won the Lottery: The Color of Time, Chapter 2
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
33
views
Two Jokers in the Same Deck: The Color of Time, Chapter 1
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek nod to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
32
views
The Scroll of Rohan Hanuman - The Color of Time: The Beginning
The Color of Time is book three in (Working Title) Liminal Era, a trilogy that blends modern fantasy with that set in a secondary-world setting, and hard science fiction. It has a hard fantasy element that becomes a hard science element, even expressed in a formula in book three. This book is a novel of ideas. Think of each "chapter" like an "episode" in a television series. Most are around an hour in length. There are about half a dozen ideas spread across the episodes. One concerns the time of the Tower of Babel being much like the post-apocalyptic wasteland of Mad Max. One idea explores a new sort of energy through a metaphysical formula linking physics to metaphysics. One explores the reality of the church in North Korea. Another explores quantum computing as related to metaphysics. Finally, the reality of New Jerusalem is mathematically examined, and the consequences of its 1,500 X 1,500 X 1,500 mile size. In a certain way this book is a repudiation to Heinlein's "basic" book, "Job: A Comedy of Justice", which corrects his clear misunderstanding of the source material he mocked. Loved Heinlein's writing, hated his ideology.
The entire story is told in a series of adventurous episodes punctuated by thought-provoking exploration of these concepts in a way that directly advances the story. We have a chase story, a mysterious investigation, government conspiracy, and many veiled asides that draw clear criticism of modern society. Oh. There are DRAGONS. At least three of them. Real ones. Now...I was going to call this "The Three Dragons", or "Three Dragons", or "Three Dragon Problem" as a tongue-in-cheek aside to "Three Body Problem". However...I thought "The Color of Time" is fundamentally better. It's just not as marketable. What a crux!
This book will take you places. But it's not a normal book. It is not yet published. I hope to find a publisher. If I can't, I want to make enough headway to self-publish. If you like the sound of that, help me out. Like, share, subscribe.
25
views
Space Communism
Sunny Hostin thinks pollution causes eclipses. This woman is richer than 99% of us will ever be. And there are bits of lint with a better understanding of reality.
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UNCENSORED COMEDY, French Accent (Miles City, MT, 12/02/2023)
An uncensored intimate show with French Accent in Montana, 12/02/2023
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Scott Bennett on Primetime Russian News Television, Helping Bridge the Gap
Unfortunately, many countries don't see America for its people, they see it for its politics; just like Americans often regard an entire country as having the same perspective as those who lead it. This is a barrier to truth and brotherhood. Scott Bennett understands, and helps the Russian people understand those of us in America are not in favor of the broad ideological revolution forcing perversity on the country. He points out that it's as though Russia were a fish in a bowl, and America was the same; but the Russian fishbowl has clean water, and the American fish bowl does not. Then he likens the dirty water in America to a variety of ideological rot, including transgenderism etc. Very important perspective, and right now, strangely, Russians may be better allies to Americans than our own government.
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2
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Scott Bennett Reports on Destruction in Donetsk From Ukrainian Corruption
Scott Bennett, former intelligence officer with the US military and whistleblower, reports on his recent trip to Donetsk in the Donbast region of eastern Ukraine, where Ukrainians have spent the last year and a half using funding from outside the Ukraine to completely destroy metropolitan areas of this Russian community. The Ukraine has been perpetuating war crimes of this kind, often from under the penumbra of Azov ideological sentiment (that which is fundamentally Nazi) for nearly a decade. Presently, the terror of those in Donetsk, where no military targets exist, is being funded by US resources and more. There aren't deep mineral reserves or anything of the kind; there aren't desirable assets in Donetsk. There are only Russian locals who won't follow Nazi radicals at the higher echelons of Ukrainian "government". The Ukrainians terrorize this region of "their" country, to the point Russia intervened. However, Donetsk locals voted against Ukrainian leadership many years ago, as this region is a Russian region primarily. This is, in large part, what has caused deep ire in the Ukrainian government, but it's more complex than that, and too involved for a video synopsis blurb. At any rate, the destruction in Donetsk is heartbreaking, and evokes visions of Berlin after the second world war; perhaps even more so, as Berlin was a central target. Donetsk, as Scott Bennett puts it, is like if a world power decided to obliterate Detroit today. There's already not much going on there. Ultimately the actions of the Ukrainian government underwritten by the US are just a crime against the impoverished humanity in such a region; Poor Folk who are unable to escape such onslaught.
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2
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Chess is Racist - French Accent
A live recording of comedian French Accent, aka Kevin Bennett, in Lead, South Dakota, 9/22/23, performing an "adult" headlining set.
Featuring Act and Host: Alan Bromwell
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