11-05-2009, 01:56 AM
(11-04-2009, 07:22 PM)Questioner Wrote: I am trying to wrap my head around the physics of Dewey Larson, but I don't have the math background to fully appreciate it.Don't want to sidetrack this discussion, but Larson purposely avoided complicated math with his system. I think the problem of understanding, instead, is much more due to the learning curve involved in removing some unnecessary assumptions about the nature of "space" and "time". Fundamentally, prior to some of their qualities being experienced (separately) as necessary to support causal reasoning, they are actually a duality.
So the challenge, as I see it, is to accept the philosophical underpinnings first. Samuel Alexander's "Space, Time, and Deity" does provide some philosophical background. Have you read that? Fairly certain that was seminal to Larson's general space/time duality idea.
Using the the Ra Material concepts:
At 1st density, "space" = "body", and "time" = "mind".