A Body of Time
As I’ve approached this new design, with the intentions of successfully forming a blueprint to help others understand Artificial Time Technology, the realm of quantum manages to once again find a place inside my playbook. To fully understand time, it helps to visualise time in the form of a body. I now understand that the physical position in time often meets a psychological position in time. In addition, there is a wide range of data somewhere inside hidden and public files, where this analogy allows us make sense of these technologies.
I and yes, I and I, had made mention of the storage unit of a great mind. Some would call it God, maybe others would call it really advanced technology capable of storing everything we have ever thought, said, or put into action. If the all knowing is all knowing, it likely understands this analogy; the quantum realm of information. And if this is true, then we can break down these files to simplify this understanding. Simple division.
What is half of 2+2?
Two things to consider:
- The clock of the mind
- The clock of the body (Physical Clock)
Do we think as we do?
Notice that the mind and body are aligned at time (T). The image above is a visual IMG I created to express this quantum analogy by putting together a few variables.
What if it were possible to accelerate the clock of the mind? What would become of the written and/or coded algorithm? Could we change a defined program? Would it be worth changing? Could we save a life?
Example:
An addition to the above IMG example, a character is in the process of eating a heavy meal while observing the physical outer data at time (T). At time (T) the mind would think “Glass of Water.” Though we know according to basic Google research that it’s not good to drink water before or during a heavy meal for various reasons. If by design this information was written in sequence in time, and we could accelerate the clock of the mind, maybe we could prevent over-extended diluted stomach acid that can lead to bloating and other stomach issues.
Alexander Garza
