It is cubed because each of the 3 dimensions is expanding at the same rate.
Space has a dimensional direction grid. There are two directions for each dimension. Up and down direction for the first dimension lets say. Right and left for the second dimension lets say and then front and back directions in the third dimension. All dimensions are alike. They all have two directions in space. And you can't tell them apart. The dimensional grid is another way of looking at space. If you take whole space we see infinte directions or what is called degrees of freedom.
On Nov 7, 5:20 am, BURT <macromi...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> It is cubed because each of the 3 dimensions is expanding at the same > rate.
> Space has a dimensional direction grid. There are two directions for > each dimension. Up and down direction for the first dimension lets > say. Right and left for the second dimension lets say and then front > and back directions in the third dimension. All dimensions are alike. > They all have two directions in space. And you can't tell them apart. > The dimensional grid is another way of looking at space. If you take > whole space we see infinte directions or what is called degrees of > freedom.
> Mitch Raemsch
no BURT, from my perspective that is not the way the universe WARTs. space may have many, many i mean countless number of many axes and that number is same as the number of material points consisting the local brotherhood of material points. each axis is not strait line but it is elliptic or spiral one. it means that along the elliptic axis if you start from one point and go forward or backward you will end up where you started (the zero is neutral, left and right from it are the protet and antitet while the diametrically opposite infinity is doubtral) while along the spiral axis the ending point differs from the starting point in recursive manner: their next difference against their current difference equals to their current difference against their previous difference -- the lever law again. your degree of freedom is now set to infinity that is you're dismissed.
<nada...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Nov 7, 5:20 am, BURT <macromi...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > It is cubed because each of the 3 dimensions is expanding at the same > > rate.
> > Space has a dimensional direction grid. There are two directions for > > each dimension. Up and down direction for the first dimension lets > > say. Right and left for the second dimension lets say and then front > > and back directions in the third dimension. All dimensions are alike. > > They all have two directions in space. And you can't tell them apart. > > The dimensional grid is another way of looking at space. If you take > > whole space we see infinte directions or what is called degrees of > > freedom.
> > Mitch Raemsch
> no BURT, from my perspective that is not the way the universe WARTs. > space may have many, many i mean countless number of many axes and > that number is same as the number of material points consisting the > local brotherhood of material points. each axis is not strait line but > it is elliptic or spiral one. it means that along the elliptic axis if > you start from one point and go forward or backward you will end up > where you started (the zero is neutral, left and right from it are the > protet and antitet while the diametrically opposite infinity is > doubtral) while along the spiral axis the ending point differs from > the starting point in recursive manner: their next difference against > their current difference equals to their current difference against > their previous difference -- the lever law again. your degree of > freedom is now set to infinity that is you're dismissed.