Pat -
On Thursday, March 14, 2002, at 12:09 , Patrick G Konshak wrote:
Robert,
Lets say that there is no such thing as time. All events happen at once 
as individual nodes. But our limited brains can only receive then in a 
linear events. If this is true then my conscience would have to be a 
great super powerful computer to put these events into a linear pattern 
of cause and effect. That is: the striking of a match is the cause of the 
effect of fire (not the other way around). Or maybe there is a mechanism 
that dose this for my conscience, like time? But that can't be right, 
because time dose not exist. So my conscience has to be a great super 
powerful computer.
Your consciousness (conscience is sense of right and wrong) does not 
impose the sequencing order. The limitations on your consciousness are 
imposed by laws outside your control. The cause and effect limitations are 
dictated by these laws (physics). Your consciousness is prohibited from 
visiting the node where effect does not follow cause. These laws restrict 
your selection of nodes along the probability path. It's not so much that 
our physical brains are incapable of processing the data, but that they 
are not presented with the data in any order other than that imposed by 
the 'rules'.
Also my conscience would have to make sure it stays on the right branch.
 What's to keep it from jumping around the tree and seeing fish turn 
into refrigerators? Is the answer 'space'? Na, what's space? Nothing.
 It can't exist.
The rules (laws of physics) are what keep your consciousness on such a 
narrow nodal path. As I explained in my other email. I think it's our 
(mankind) job to figure out what all the laws are. Perhaps that will allow 
us to circumvent or work around the laws. The bigger question is who made 
these rules?
If our minds are limited to only see events linear, what is the force or 
mechanism that's limiting them? Or if the limitation is do to the lack 
of something. What force or mechanism is our minds lacking?
Good question. See above. But once again, in a model of a universe without 
time. The rules are imposed upon our consciousness. Not our brains. The 
laws actually limit which nodes in the probability matrix we can 
experience, not whether cause follows effect. Just like our consciousness,
 these laws are outside the matrix.
All the actual physical objects inside the matrix follow very few rules. 
They must have a shape, size, color, etc. These objects do not move 
(another one of the concepts that must be accepted if one accepts the 
principle of 'no such thing as time') or interact, they are separate from 
each other. Fixed into a static grid, a node within the probability matrix.
 Therefore all the laws of physics regarding interactions, movement, cause 
and effect, etc. Are actually limitations on our consciousness. They are 
limitations on the manner in which our consciousness experiences the 
matrix. The rules that govern which node we may visit. If we have just 
finished processing the node where a match was struck, then the rules are 
written such that we can only visit one of two other nodes. We can either 
visit the node where a fire results, or one where a fire does not. But we 
cannot visit the node where the match is replaced with a GE Energy Saver 
refrigerator.
I know that this is a somewhat simplistic explanation of the probability 
path/tree; but we've been following it so far. If you need more examples 
that illustrate limitations on which node you can experience next please 
let me know.
You say 'time' doesn't exist, and then you say our conscience perceive 
things in a linear way. Linear perception is time. Your say time doesn'
t exist, but then you say our conscience exist in time.
Time does not exist. Perception does not equal reality. We perceive the 
sun 'Rising' in the morning, and 'Setting' in the evening. The sun does 
not 'move' across the sky, and it doesn't 'disappear' at night. Our 
consciousness processes/experiences different nodes in the matrix. The 
manner in which it experiences these nodes is governed by a series of laws 
or rules. One of those laws or rules dictates the order rate in which we 
experience the nodes.
We experience the nodes (instantaneous events) in a linear manner. In one 
direction at a time. Going back to my illustration of a probability tree 
(see my web page: https://www.robsworld.org/notime.html); Node A,
 followed by node A1, followed by node A11. If we were not limited by this 
rule/law we could be in more than one place at a time (so to speak). We 
could experience node A, followed by A1, and then A2 (or reverse). Since 
A1 and A2 are adjacent nodes in a standard experiential probability path 
you would be experiencing two nodes simultaneously. You'd be experiencing 
the nodes in a parallel, rather than linear, fashion.
We experience the nodes in a sequential manner. In our case, the 
consciousness is limited to experiences that follow a path of node A, 
followed by node A1, followed by node A11. If we were not limited by this 
rule/law we could move from node A11 to node A, and then to node A1. 
Moving backward and forward at will along the probability path.
If we were not bound by the laws as I've described, the probability tree 
model would look differently. It would be more like a probability sphere 
or cloud.
Our consciousness does not exist in time. The rules which restricts how it 
moves with the matrix are interpreted by us as time.
At one time man interpreted the earth as being the center of the solar 
system. He did this because he was unwilling to believe something that was 
contradictory to his senses. What are your senses telling you about time?
 Very young children have no concept of time. They learn about time from 
adults, and what they are told is reinforced by their senses. Adults 
describe time in terms of motion and cause and effect. The lessons are 
reinforced by sight and sound.
You say 'events'. Photons, gravity, electron, etc.. exist. An event. 
What's an event. Events don't exist because an event is time. 
Everything happens at once so there is no such thing as events. Our 
minds can't perceive linear events (past, present, and future), they don'
t exist. There for we don't exist.
I use the term event to describe a node. A singular configuration of 
matter in which all things exist. This configuration constitutes a single 
node within the probability matrix. I call this frozen/unmoving 
configuration of matter a node or event. I've been using the terms 
interchangeably.
An event is not time. An event is a single node within the probability 
matrix. There is no time component in the probability matrix. Perhaps I 
shouldn't use the terms interchangeably? I created the term 'node' to 
avoid the time based connotations attached to the word 'event'. I thought 
that I could use them interchangeably after I had defined node. I thought 
you would see the interchangeable aspects, and accept them as synonymous.
Our minds do perceive linear events. They do this as a result of the laws 
imposed upon our consciousness. Our consciousness is only capable of 
experiencing the nodes in a linear fashion. In turn, we rationalize this 
linear sequence as being part of the physical order of things.
You need to answer these questions. Don't just say "You have to ask a 
priest or something". This is why. You formed the believe that 'time' 
dose not exist. You had to base it on something or did you flip a coin?
 Base on the questions I asked above, there's a big part of the puzzle 
missing. Your holding back. Cuff it up. What are you hiding up you 
sleeve. Maybe you think I will not understand. This why I sent some may 
reply. Trying to get you to reveal your secretes.I decided it's time 
for a Klingon approach and come right out and ask you.
I'm not sure exactly which questions you want me to answer. Aside from the 
questions about who created these laws, and why are they written the way 
they are. I've been doing my best to explain how our universe could exist 
without time and motion.
I didn't come up with the idea that 'Time does not exist'. Others thought 
about this long before I was born. I sort of stumbled upon it. Having 
cobbled it together experientially (Not experimentally) throughout the 
years. Reading the book, 'The End of Time' by Adrian Barbour, is what 
helped me codify my beliefs about time. I hadn't even thought about motion 
until reading that book. The book helped me put names to the things I'd 
been thinking about. It helped me understand why I'd been having trouble 
believing other cosmology theories.
I didn't flip a coin, and I'm not holding back on you. The only thing I 
haven't been giving you is the formulae. The math that scientists (There 
are many scientists who believe that time does not exist) have been using 
to support the 'No time' theory. The math is actually used more to 
disprove time based models of the universe, than it is to prove 'No time'
 theories. I haven't been using/describing the math because it's way over 
my head. It doesn't do me much good, and I usually can't follow it. I suck 
at math, and excel at words. I could describe just about anything with 
words. But I can't see a sphere in 2(Πr2). (is that right?).
If I still haven't convinced you that time doesn't exist I may never. 
Perhaps you'd like to read the book I suggested. It doesn't explain things 
in quite the same manner that I have, and it uses somewhat different terms.
 It does, however go into much greater detail, and includes mathematical 
formulae to support and refute various points.
Temporaphobia (I made that one up)
Actual term: Chronophobia - Abnormal/irrational fear of clocks, time or 
duration. Recognized by medical and psychology fields.
- Robert