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Re: What shape is our universe?

Posted: April 2nd, 2022, 10:50 pm
by Paradigmer
Raymond wrote: March 31st, 2022, 7:51 am
Paradigmer wrote: February 20th, 2022, 10:40 pm
Raymond wrote: February 20th, 2022, 3:43 pm
Paradigmer wrote: February 15th, 2022, 12:18 am

Hi Raymond, glad to know you had that "wonderful and gloriously radiating epiphany last year".

I also experienced such an epiphany, which led me to develop a treatise that approaches cosmology from an entirely different perspective.




That's quite some stuff you wrote! I have to read it a few times to let it sink in. You see that the universe sometimes shows itself? Just treat her like a good friend. Of course she'll always keep some!
Am elated you could tolerate the verbosity of my write-ups, and even went to the extent of reading it a few times.

The simplicity of the postulated underlying mechanism that forms the cosmos is like how Richard Fenyman put it:
“I have often made the hypothesis that ultimately physics will not require a mathematical statement, that in the end the machinery will be revealed and the laws will turn out to be simple.”

And I love your descriptions on "The basic form is an open spatially 4D torus. A 4D Planck-sized wormhole connects two infinite 4D spaces on which two closed spherical 3D spheres move away from the central wormhole, the singularity. ".

You have shown a lot of vertices! Niiiice! I did a vortex once in water:

https://youtu.be/_R1YBQACO9U
The 4D torus is a vortical structure, which is shaping the cosmos.

This 4d torus is vortexing throughout the macrocosms and the microcosms in a nested manner, which is the fundamental causality for vortices are thus ubiquitous throughout the observable universe.