If we're trying to build an  image which reflects "all aspects of reality", how do life and  consciousness  fit into this picture? Erwin  Schrödinger's definition of  life is that  it's "a unique process  which creates pockets of negative  entropy". Physicists talk about the beginning of the universe being the  most  highly ordered/lowest entropy version of our universe, and how  the "arrow of  time" represents an overall climb in the amount of  entropy, despite the  efforts of life within these little pockets where  (as Dylan Thomas  put it so beautifully) it 'rages against the  dying of the light'. This  theme of life and consciousness being like a  fire, a spark, that  somehow engages with space-time and our fifth-dimensional probability  space to keep itself  moving forward is the theme of a number of the 26  songs I created for  this project. I talked about those songs and this  way of thinking about life and creativity in a blog entry called Novelty.
The phrase "self-excited circuit" comes from a paper published in 1979  by physicist John Wheeler, you can read about it in the wikipedia  article on Digital Physics. As part of his "Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe (CTMU)", Christopher Langan  (who some readers will know as "the smartest man in America") has  published an animated version of the simple drawing Wheeler created for  his paper on the self-excited circuit, showing a "U" (standing for  universe), incorporating an eyeball representing the quantum observer,  looking at its "tail" that represents the "information" side of the  "information equals reality" concept that we talk about regularly with  this project. Wheeler also coined the phrase "'it' from 'bit'"which ties  nicely to these discussions. 
In my follow-up book to Imagining the Tenth Dimension, which is a collaboration with visual artist Marilyn E. Robertson called O is for Omniverse, we devoted the letter "J" to John Wheeler:
j is for John Wheeler, a famous physicistHere's a video showing the letters "I" and "J" from that book, you can see a lot more if you go to omniverse.tv.
who drew a strange eyeball looking at its tail
as a way to imagine that some branches of our line
might be changed in the past as we look back from today
so the branching tree that extends from "now"
is even more surprising: it branches either way
A direct link to the above video is at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HA_epL_rEW4
Next: Timelessness and the Ultimate Ensemble
Previously in this series:
Wrapping it Up in the Tenth Dimension
Imagining the Ninth Dimension
Imagining the Eighth Dimension
Imagining the Seventh Dimension
Imagining the Sixth Dimension
Imagining the Fifth Dimension
Imagining the Fourth Dimension
Imagining the Third Dimension
Imagining the Second Dimension

4 comments:
Hi Rob ... just stumbled upon your wonderful blog and book and it occurred to me how nicely it seems to tie in with the work of fellow Canadian Nassim Haramein -- although you may of course disagree. Just wondered if you've had any contact with him, or his ideas?
Hi Dana, thanks for your kind words! I've talked about Nassim's work a number of times in this blog, here's a link that will take you to the 10 or so entries I've tagged with his name.
http://imaginingthetenthdimension.blogspot.com/search/label/Nassim%20Haramein
No, I've never heard from Nassim, but I agree that there are some intriguing connections. The one sticking point, of course, is that he doesn't believe in extra dimensions, and that includes the first and second, so I'm not sure that he would see much that interests him with my project.
Cheers!
Rob
Thanks for the links, as well as the reference to "Everything Forever."
These should keep me blissfully busy for quite a while ... I think I may have discovered what to do in my retirement :]]
Here's another one I've found fascinating, you may want to ponder
http://www.youtube.com/user/theabhakingdom#p/p
Keep up the great work ... or play!
kind regards
Just realized you've already tuned into Randy Powell ... you're way ahead of me in the probable future ;-)
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