Hawaiian Lyric of the Month (Feb/Mar)  "I am coming, though I am leaving, I'm just hanging on, not knowing why.
     (Coming in April/May - IZ)                     " I found a reason for staying, found the beauty in saying, this is my, my home." - Olomana (Home)
The New...
...And the Old (Artwork, Poetry, Prose)
The 4D Sculptures (model of one below)

There are 4 different sculptures I wish to make (about 10 of each one) in the next year representing different aspects of 4D space. The first, largest, and easiest to understand is the Double Reversed Dual Earth sculpture representing curved 3D space. It is to be constructed of a 3 frequency geodesic dome with glass panels approximately 14 feet (4 meters) high, with a glass ball in the center approximately 3 feet (1 meter) across. On the interior is a normal representation of the Earth but on the inside curving around you in the center, meant to be be viewed from the inside. The other glass Earth in the center is a typical representation of Earth but upside down and turned opposed to the outer one. Together they represent a hyperspheric shaped Universe. If 3D space is curved in the shape of a hypersphere as many scientists believe may be the case, any direction you go would lead you back to where you started from. To see through or around the curvature, you would see the back of your head, like seeing all the way around Earth's surface if you could see around and level with its curvature. Thus any direction you would look up from Earth, if you could look across curved space's curvature, you would see another Earth equally away from all points on the first, movement and distance not counted for course. Walking around in one of the sculptures would give one the "feeling" of what curved 3D space is like, and how objects shape and location are dependent upon where you are standing relative to them and which direction you are moving in. The point halfway between the Earths would be the antipole (I figured out the concept on my own but I think Einstein invented the word), the 4D equivalent of the South pole if you were on the North pole on a curved 2D plane we call a regular sphere. The antipole would be a single place or spot (like the south pole) but being in that spot you would appear to surround the Earth as well, and the Earth would seem to surround you as the outer Earth does the inner Earth in the sculpture. At that point in space, all points along the surface of the Earth would be an equal distance away from you making it appear the Earth curves away from you, not around itself. That is because at that point in space, it does both. From there it does not "appear" to curve around you, from that point in space it does. This relational aspect reverses itself as you move toward it in any direction until you are right beside it where it completely curves away from you. Earth's shape does not change, but the shape of space between, (or more precisely how objects appear to allign themselves within that region of space or method of measuring space) would. All points on an imaginary ball half way between the 2 earths would in fact all be the exact same location. To someone who did not know the Earth was round and did not know what a ball or sphere was would be equally puzzled on how the south pole could be a single spot yet also a giant circle in every direction away from you as well (if you stood on the north pole). See below for the mini-model.

Time Roads and Shadows of Time Roads

Time Roads is responsible pretty much for everything written here and done after Deconstructing the Universe. It made me have to wrap up Deconstructing the Universe, and leave Maui, my adopted island home. After getting hit by a car, I could not work for awhile, but my disorientation immediately afterwards lead to Time Roads. Around the 3rd chapter where it ends for now, I began to look into quantum gravity and 4D space. Since I did not agree with much written about 4D space in the books I read, I ended up writing the first 1/2 of 2D, 3D, 4D, 5D Thinking Made Simple to better frame the subject. This is easily the longest and most complex single subject and form I have ever undertaken but it is fairly simple enough to understand if read slowly. More illustrations would be helpful but I made a conscious effort to put enough descriptions into the text so that they would not be required. I took the 1/2 of 2D, 3D, 4D, 5D Thinking Made simple that was done and put it together with two short (math/science) stories, Universe Inc's Paradoxes and Probability Waves, and Alien Abduction and the Schrodinger Security Guard, and released as an HTX file called Shadows of Time Roads. Small scene sections from the stories and links for the full  individual stories are below and beside the Time Roads link.

Time Roads: (Time Roads and Existential Roads of Perceptual Expectations) 



2D, 3D, 4D, 5D Thinking Made Simple selection and link...

"...You said space/time is the creation in opposition to matter as if it were an equal inverted "substance" yet you described it as a force emanating outwards in relation or in opposition to gravity’s pull inwards. How can space/time be thought to be like a substance and a force or energy at the same time?" 
    "How," Inventor countered, "can light be a substance and a force or energy at the same time?" 
    "Matter, the power of the Dark Side!" Assistwo said while breathing like Darth Vader. 
    "Space/time doubles up or trips over itself while seeking to exit or leave away from matter defined by the number of dimensions the matter exists within...." 
                    ++++++++++++++++++++.
        "Yes," Inventor replied, "everything 2D would eventually become as circle and everything 3D would eventually become a sphere or ball, as I like to call them. My own cube, if it had intelligence, would say "I’d rather be a ball." Irregularly shaped objects such as my cube exist because each atom is trying not just to fold into a black hole or implode into the center of its mass, both trying to get away from there and go to there at once. They are similarly both attracted and repelled by each other. They can’t stand each other and want to call the whole object off and go their separate ways, and they like each other so much they want to get so close together it would literally create a black hole big enough to swallow all of them." 
         "So existence itself is the ultimate love/hate relationship," Assistwo said smiling. 
         "We don’t have to get that philosophical about it," Inventor continued, "it is enough to say everything, or every part of an object is trying to move away from its center and implode into it, in a larger sense around its whole center if it could, but wherever it is thickest also nearby." 
         "So a cylinder, another of your mathematically possible 3D shapes, would have 2 kinds of centers, the one center of all 3 dimensions and a second center running the entire length of the central circle!" Assistwo said. 

2D, 3D, 4D, 5D Thinking Made Simple

Deconstructing the Universe 1.8 (In Wonder)

What was to be the last thing I ever wrote just never seemed to end. In many ways, I will never be able to surpass it. I consider the Introduction and the Notes on the Introduction probably the best of anything I have ever written or read. It taught me to never lose the wonder and fascination with a world in that no matter how bright you are, no matter how much knowledge you think you can gain about it, you will never, ever, do more than barely scratch its surface, if you even get that far. The Introduction and Notes on the Introduction explain that much better than I can with only a few words here, but no knowledge, wealth, power, nor anything else do I value more now than to always remember, constantly and continuously, to never lose the wonder.

Deconstructing the Universe 1.8 (In Wonder)



Yoshoe and Yoshomee.

A little one page story I came up with (or the Universe did) and was included in the 5D Notes as it was connected to that train of thought.

Yoshoe and Yoshomee:  The love story outside of time and behind each moment in time



Universe Inc's Paradoxes and Probability Waves selection and link...

"...To make it simple enough for you to understand, it has already occurred. Since you did leave at exactly 5 pm, you are able to waste many minutes of your precious 4 hours arguing with me about the rules. If you had not already will have done so, you would not have had the time in the first place to have been wasting it arguing with me!" 
    "You are telling me that if I don’t leave through that door at exactly 5 pm, I never came in through it?

Universe Inc's Paradoxes and Probability Waves



Alien Abduction and the Schrodinger Security Guard selection and link...

...He offers you two choices, tell him the truth of how you got in there or he will shoot you. Though he is speaking your own language, you translate this to mean, "Tell me a lie I might believe and I won’t shoot you immediately." 
    You hesitate for a second and like Schrodinger’s Box, the Universe splits into two universes. In one, you understandably are hard pressed to come up with an explanation he would believe and are shot before you finish your first complete sentence. In another, you are suddenly struck with an insight I obviously lack because I will not even attempt to come up with something believable for a situation like that. You mesmerize this security guard, satisfy his curiosity and intrigue him enough with the possible implications of your story that he gives you some clothes to wear, food to eat, and drinks while you talk things over, and then he shoots you. 

Alien Abduction and the Schrodinger Security Guard


...And the Old (Artwork, Poetry, Prose)
Poetry (click on the title to bring up each book)


The Versatile Verse 
    The philosophical one. This is first collection I wrote. Not as good as the others in skill but beyond compare in the range and philosphical nature of many of its poems. It is plain Zen. The subjects were good and diverse, and the rhyming was a device I sought to master and did pretty well at, probably sometimes at the expense of the content. But the presise meter and form was a straightjacket I learned still to move about in fairly freely.
Repetition
    The lite one. This was the first to be written in all in the same year, January to December, as was Triumvirum and Quadranine. It was consciously meant to be almost the opposite of The Versatile Verse with short poems about nothing too important, all written just for fun. Rhyming was often unimportant or not used at all. What comes to mind first and foremost of this collection was #1 on page one chronologically as written, This Room. It was written about the Reading Room of the Library of Congress, which had left an impression on me which I wrote about in that poem when back at college in January waiting for a class to start.
Triumvirum
    The political one. Written while in college mostly in a dorm (deja vu). I really hit a stride with this one. It combined the light playfulness of Repetition with a return to more serious subjects, and the structures became more complex within.
Quadranine
    The complex one. (The cover was a Tesseract! Big time deja vu on that one.) The title referred to the fact that all previous collections ended up divided into 9 sections, and this one was also, thus Quadra 9. All except Triumvirum's 3x3 format were just coincidentally divided into 9 sections. I can't compare this collection to the others. It just exploded creatively. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. When or where it worked, it was awesome though. Ocassionally dark and twisted, yet never without a purpose or soul. The Bleeding Crowd section comes to mind in that respect. It ended with the epic Vestabur in December, written while I was extremely feverish (like 105 F) with the flu and severely way way out of it. Only when I was just as ill exactly one week later did I return to writing it but skipped ahead to the end because I couldn't wait to find out how it turned out. Where it came from, God only knows.
Pentacle
     The final one. Poetry just was no fun anymore with Pentacle. I began to feel every poem had to be better than every one before in every way. The original title was to be a word I found in a dictionary, Pentium, which was a better name but some obscure computer chip company in California forever warped its meaning. (The sixth book was to be formulas and equations mixed with poems about the dehumanizing effect of technology and was to have been called Hexidecimal. Alas, I never got the math down enough to come up with Nobel prize worthy original formulas to mix in with the poems <g> T=D*V*-g?). Besides, Pentacle took almost a decade between to get back to and finally wrap up once I was no longer self-conscious about writing it. One day after 8 years, I just wrote Too Long Gone. My mind was in a dark place, but the poem, completely contrary to its words, was saying the fire and light were still in there somewhere trying to get out, not just lamenting their loss. To admit you miss something is to admit that it is still a part of you, even if you don't or can't see it that way yet. Its ending point was at Going Home, about both dying and about moving to Hawaii, which to me were both the same thing. I was to live there for the rest of my life. The only future I saw was nothingness, all black. Though I was rich and had much to look forward to, I sensed no future for me whatsoever, only doom. I was shocked when the plane landed that I had made it there, so strong was the feeling I could not possibly, and was in awe every day that I was there. It was like existing outside of time. Ironically, leaving Hawaii 3 years later, extremely poor, completely screwed beyond all hope, I saw the future as being completely white, limitless in potential where anything is possible. It is literally a whole new ballgame, a complete rebirth, like going through a black hole into a whole new universe, or a whole new life. A corner definitely has been turned somehow and every step is into new and uncharted territory.
The Dance, Longform, Starry Journeys
    Though there were only 5 original books, there were 3 smaller recompilations of them worthy of note. The Dance assembled most of the best 30 or so in an order taking one on a journey from birth to death. The Dance I believe is the best poem, and Tomorrow, The Immortals, and The Dark Horse seem the most masterful ones. Longform was a collection of the longer story form poems all in one place. Only 6 were really long, but some other story type ones were included as well to make it a collection. Starry Journeys was a similar recompilation which overlapped many in the other 2 recompilations but grouped together the all poems that had traveling or journey themes. It included 2 left out of the earlier works, Leaving Home which predates all of others except The Burnout, and Vangaurd Ventures from the Quadranine era. It also included 2 new ones, Whenever You, and From Being to Becoming, the latter written for Towards Tomorrow. Other poems written specifically for later works are The Representative of the Past to the Future, Expectations, and First or Last, also for Towards Tomorrow, and A Pulse, Bent Paths, One Light, No One is Ahead, What Is, Each Thing in the Universe, and To Co-Exist, all for the 2003 .8 (In Wonder) appendages added to 2002's Deconstrucing the Universe.




Artwork:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Prose (in reverse order) (click on the title to bring up each book)

Toward Tomorrow
     As being Deconstucting the Universe's immediate predecessor is the way I see Toward Tomorrow. It was about time, many of its themes turn up somewhere or in some other form in Deconstructing the Universe, and also for the reasons stated to the left under Pentacle, it was to be a coda, a final note. First Words themes are found better developed in Deconstructing the Universe's Perspective. Growing Expectations is the only reasonable dispassionate look at cloning I have ever read. Love it (no one does) or hate it, (most do) like the worst weapon imaginable which humanity can build, it is only a matter of time before it becomes a reality. No countries will talk about cloning, no countries will admit to doing it, but countries that can afford to given the present political environment, will convince themselves they cannot afford not to, the potential rewards are that great, though barbaric. Barbarity never stopped humanity before and won't in this respect either. Any strategic advantage is always considered so long as nations play the power struggle game, and they show no signs of bowing out of that game any time soon. Trust as Faith was written in direct response to the immediate response to the events of September 11th, 2001. It was about the rapid erosion of the faith people must have in one another for societies to exist and prosper. Anger turned to fear, fear to paranoia, paranoia to blind murderous rage, and anyone was fair game. Neighbors turned on neighbors, and innocent people had their businesses burned or beaten or killed for looking like the wrong sort of people. It was relatively small scale, but the minority involved was miniscule, and so it could not escalate as it might have if it had been a sizable percentage of the population. It was though, for me enough to see how Bosnia or Rawanda can happen anywhere. As it says "A murder in and of itself is a horrible thing, but when it sets off a chain reaction leading to many, then many times many other horrible acts, it is an even greater horrible thing. And when that was the intention all along it is revolting to the extreme. The target is nothing less than our goodwill, our trust of each other, and nothing can we afford less to lose...it is easier when constantly shown trust and respect to trust in others and to believe that most people are good, for in fact they are, even if because of some few we stop treating them that way, or even worse, stop believing it."
         "Where trust does not exist, nations cannot long endure, so much in life are we dependent upon one another. There are those who would pay any price to destroy that trust in each other, and thereby any trust in any good or positive future, and we must always be on guard that these visions of our future do not prevail. So many more good men and women have given their lives for the future, a better future, one where people don’t live in constant hate and fear, and it is to those who hoped so greatly for their children and their children’s children, for us, to live beyond their dangerous and uncertain times in an age of peace and goodwill." 
        "These are the visions of the future worth believing in, however unlikely they may someday seem likely to exist, but due to others suffering long ago in less optimistic times than we can imagine, they held close to these extremely radical beliefs so out of step with their times as any could ever be, and made that optimism prevail on an Earth that comes tantalizingly close to what they believed could one day be achieved. Remember those people and what they hoped for us, how they were tortured and killed for their dreams they could not have known would one day become our dreams and define our world. Remember those millions gone, their hopes for this tomorrow, when contemplating those would kill to destroy that better world they died for. Whose vision for which future will prevail is in no ones hands now but our own. No matter the odds, one cannot bet against the brighter future. It is a reality built on trust, and losing faith in it, betting against it, against ourselves, will destroy it."

 Morality: Individual and Social
This is from the introduction.. "I have only recently started writing again after 10 years of not doing much except occasionally some poems with years in between even at that. After having read The Discourses by Epictetus, (http://classics.mit.edu/Epictetus/) and seeing morality dealt with as an abstract outside of law and religion, both topics which I have studied greatly, I found it intriguing. Morality is something we all know really has nothing to do with what is legally required of us. It is when we do as we feel is right not because we are required to by law, or because to do otherwise would risk eternal damnation, both valid reasons for doing or not doing something, but when it applies to what each of us as a person believes to be right, we are accurately judged to be or not to be moral persons. Simply doing something because you are told to or are afraid of the consequences otherwise is not the same as believing it yourself." I tried to maintain a balanced look at morality independent of culture and time, that notions of morality evolve over time, how some things which were legal yesterday become illegal today or how things which were illegal one day suddenly became legal the next. Also, that "Not everyone one may agree today on what if any changes should be made to our present notions of what is moral or what is immoral, but through that rather irksome thing called talking about it and bothering us with their notions which usually do not often jibe with our own, that slow roll is inching toward what people will find aghast 30 years from now which people are doing legally today but just prefer not to talk or think about, just as racial discrimination was 30 years ago from today. Not having it happen at all would be to be completely and utterly morally stagnant as a society as China has been in recent times, attempting to eliminate all avenues of change. It is in the narrow-mindedness of those who always think that today's culture is the penultimate and requires no improvements at all which slows or halts societies from ever becoming more just, by eliminating debates which inevitably will disturb and disrupt, to a minor degree many or most in a society, but which future notions of morality depend upon." In retrospect, it was the beginning of the wider perspectives in Toward Tomorrow and wide open perspectives in Deconstructing the Universe. That you Epictetus, you dead Roman former slave you. You still rock.

The Relativism Books
These books are ancient history to me now. I reread them from time to time, find little to disagree with, possibly because they use so many words to say so little new. Or maybe that there is little left in them I do not know already. Without them I would not have grown beyond them, but they are to me now like the cornerstones of a bridge now submerged beneath the river. Still they are, and bridges need their cornerstones.