Tag Archive for 'space'

Requiem for a dream, or Quantum future of Humankind in Infinite Universe

Right, I know it’s not exactly a memory. It’s not even a dream, but rather a requiem for one. I used to think that we live in infinite Universe. I do not have any scientific background to come up with theories or statements, but as a human being I reserve my rights for beliefs. Be it belief in Jesus Christ the Savour, spirit of improvisation, Santa Claus, infinity of space and time, or belief in myself, belief is an integral part of any sentient self-reflecting being.

This belief in infinite Universe was simply based on the fact that we can’t measure it.

Of course, we have data that our Universe is 13,73 billion years old (as of the last week :) ). So we can imagine a ball 13,73 billion years in radius (given the speed of light 299 792 458 m/s and length of 1 year as 31 556 926 seconds it will give us approx. radius of 13 730 000 000 x 299 792 458 x 31 556 926 = 129893055103132202840000000 meters… so you know). But, as it took me about 2 min. to come up with this calculation, this radius became roughly 3597509496 m bigger.

We reached the point there I got bored myself. The numbers are just too big too mean anything. If you go shopping and see something cost 3 pounds 99 pence you’ll think it’s 4 pounds, right? This is what called approximation. So 129893055103132202840000000 + 3597509496 and counting… is a number I can’t imagine. It’s something like Bill Gate’s fortune, numbers beyond my grasp. I think that approximation of 129893055103132202840000000 + 3597509496 is infinity. There’s no need for me to operate with such numbers. I remember reading some anthropological reports about some aboriginal tribes in Papua New Guinea. They had numbers 1 to 5, and then groups: 1 to 5 too, so everything could be shown on 2 hands.

20 would be 4 times 5; 25 - 5 times 5 . Everything that was over 25 was “many-many”, uncountable, infinity.

Continue reading ‘Requiem for a dream, or Quantum future of Humankind in Infinite Universe’

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Memories’ potlatch

As I had to clean my hard drive yesterday once again, I was met with the same eternal question: what should be wiped out from it in order to obtain some space? A picture from a distant while ago, to be more precise, 6 years back from now and thousands of miles apart came back to my mind: our house in Hanger Lane (Anger Lane, as Eugeny put it once and for all bypassers by chopping off a letter in the beginning from a wooden sign in the street, or Hunger Lane as it will stay in my memories). One of my dearest friends, Massimo AKA Badile in a white doctor’s gown, sitting in a chair behind a desk in his improvised “office”, established in the midst of bunch of his clothes, toys and paints, between scattered pieces of paper, drawings, food wrappings, wirings, cables, books, cups, canvases, breakfast leftovers and various traces of our house pony Zak’s recent visit to his humble headquarters (this list can go on forever). Badile is in a good mood. He wears googles with spirals drawn on lenses today. He looks out of this world, and, indeed, he is. With his pineapple haircut freshly done and big smile on a face he asks me:

- What is necessary, Boris? - referring to this universe of things compromising his inhabitat. He is in the mood for cleaning.

_ What is necessary? - I ask this question myself yet once again, looking into the contents of my little, 15 by 5 inches silver treasure box: a case, in which we put generously donated by Apollo hard drive, which once belonged to our desk top, which we left behind when …it’s a very long story, which goes without end, as that kids’ poem about a house which Jack built. This little silver enclosure is my black box, similar to a black box they would recover after an airplane crash, as it contains more or less detailed account of my last 5 years of life.

I leave photos, texts, drawings and films aside, and flip through the contents of my music folder, compromising over 6o gig of memory.

A wife of my brother once complained about him: they wanted to clean their house, and he decided to start from dumping his old tapes. She found him 4 hours later in the garage, sitting in his car and listening to them on a car stereo. I know this feeling. Though some of tracks that this file contains were hardly played by me again since I put them there, I still wanted to keep them, as there were reasons for putting them there in the first place: most of them were my memories. And so I randomly played them one by one, as saying goodbye to my dear friends and moments we shared together before we depart forever.

Because I had moved a lot and often, there are very few things which stay with me long. Thinking about, only music does. As I think once again about all the possible ways to map our memories, I come up with a picture of a city, surrounded by terra incognita, which  thorefore rather looks like an island with wide streets or rather streams of my life: Siberia (to which belongs and my hometown after we moved away; not in geopraphic, but in a practical sense, as it represents for me wast unknown void with few orientiers and few people living there: I succesfully secluded myself with chess and books in my room in my youth), Voronezh and my student years, Moscow, India, Moscow 2 (as it was an entirely different space inhabited by different people upon my coming back), London etc…

a random city map

Little streets run left and right from those avenues, dividing those timestreams into little ones: as fish contains a backbone with smaller and yet smaller bones, my life or this memory map could be examined anatomically too.

Fish skeleton

Many of the names of that map would bear names of my favourite bands.

Maybe memory as a river would be a better example. It’s interesting to see how memory could be represented in all these different ways; let’s put random images of my liking I found in Internet together; you can replace the descriptive words with your own, if you like. I’d rather keep them unnamed, as they shift as the river does it’s bed from year to year:

a river map

As there are few ways to explore a landscape, I’ll switch from looking at imaginary memoryscape to its description: a bare name rarely means a thing. Referring to name of the place is alike referring  to people. A while ago I’ve overheard a conversation between 2 girls on a bus:

1: Who was there?

2: A guy with a red hair; the guy in a black T-shirt who talks a lot and a silly one.

What a great description was it! It still stays in my mind though few years already passed, and I doubt if blank names would. So, returning to my memories connected with music: Continue reading ‘Memories’ potlatch’

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Feeling of being human

In 1687 Sir Isaac Newton published Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, which laid the foundation of determinism. Through Newton’s ideas in what we call now the Age of Reason, rose the idea of ”clockwork universe”, generally stating that by measuring things as they are, we can accurately explain all the Nature’s phenomenae and predict the future using the laws of science.

 One probably could wonder, what does Newton’s work has to do with my memories. Though I haven’t read the original and was born nearly 300 years later, it had a certain impact on me. As a matter of fact, we perceive reality and interpret it through the prism of our cultural and educational background. It’s never “as it is”, but as worthy as it’s description. My father was a strong believer in science, and wanted me to be a mathematician, a kind of a weird wish keeping in mind he was a poet himself. I remember him trying to come up with a precise word, which could describe what he felt at the moment best. He often felt stressed about it as  he couldn’t. I guess he thought it is easier to operate with numbers rather than words. I remember refusing going to my 1st grade in school: I demanded science. I wanted to study physics and maths, I wanted to understand the mechanics of existence. That’s why my parents have sent me to a school with advanced maths and science programs,  and determinism was what they taught in school too.

My belief in numbers was ruined after I’ve read at the age of 12 some popular books on astronomy and quantum mechanics: it turned out that, with the course of time any system behaviour starts to “fluctuate” and become disordered, behaving randomly. Even orbits of planets, massive bodies, never quite follow the same path. We live in a universe which is rather chaotic, then orderly. Our brain waves,  or the pattern of it’s electric impulses, is also being chaotic. This could be the origin of consciousness , free will and creativity. Our mind is ruled rather by Chaos, then Order. Continue reading ‘Feeling of being human’

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Time doesn’t exist

(Note this is a repost from my own blog)

I had the thought that time doesn’t really exist if you think about it hard enough. People look at time and space as a three dimensional environment, space goes in all directions and time goes in another direction entirely keeping a track of its own. Well my thought is that time doesn’t go in a different direction or the same direction or any direction at all. As far as I’m concerned time doesn’t exist, its a figment of the collective consciousness, a little trinket created by man to keep our lives in order. Rotations and revolutions of planets, stars, solar systems, galaxies, and universes aren’t recorded and set by some big dimensional clock, the only things in existence capable of keeping time are sentient beings, like humans and any possible extra terrestrials.

This brings me to another theory/idea that I have which I will explain backwards to forwards to make it most clear to everybody.

When you look at the matter of existence you usually end up with a few options for how it all came to be. If your into the whole religion thing you are usually pretty sure that there is a “God” somewhere out there that created the whole ..everything. For most rational beings this draws you to the question of who or what created god, and then who or what created the who or what that created god, and so on and so forth into complete oblivion. That however is more plausible than the next option of everything ever spontaneously popping into existence without reason. From nothing for no reason is just not a viable answer to anything. I can agree with any people who want to argue god over this point, they are quite right thinking that this is the answer to the big why is completely ridiculous. I wouldn’t have a problem however arguing for the matter that everything has always existed. There was never a point when there was nothing, no time when everything was made. You know why there was never such a time, well for one because time doesn’t exist. For another its the fact that things cannot possibly be made from nothing, its just rather impossible in matter concerning mathematics. There might have been have been a time when nothing living existed, or everything in the universe was all clumped together in some gigantic ball of mass, or it might have been gas or particles or who knows a gigantic friggin star, that exploded and sent its parts all over everything. If thats the case though it would like like everything comes from a gigantic star which explodes and turns into what we have now which expands to a certain point and eventually starts to collapse into itself and turn back into a star. After that the whole thing starts all over again repeated on a time scale which isn’t even comprehendable and I don’t want to think about.

So yes this has been my big rambling ramble about everything and nothing and the non existence of time.

Dalarius

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