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Fiction by
Spartacai Prologue: 'I'm sorry Professor Lugbender, I'm afraid I just can't visualize it.
I still don't see how an infinite three dimensional universe can exist
within a finite four dimensional matrix!' The year 2130, the place Milton Keynes City, cultural capital of the
world. It is 4:15pm on a
hot, bright late November afternoon.
Professor Jertzy Lugbender, Departmental Head of Theoretical
Weird and Quite Unlikely Stuff at the Federated Union Corporate
University of Newport Pagnell, is having tea with two of his students
in the palatial university gardens. 'Well Dorkslinger, it is really quite simple. Imagine if you can a matchbox full of two dimensional
matches. Now, because the
matches have only two dimensions, length and width, but not depth, it
possible for for the three dimensional matchbox to contain an infinite
amount of them. And thus
it is with our universe that the same principle is applied when when
we think about its three dimensional nature in relation to the fourth
dimension, Time.'
The professor's clipped eastern European tones bounced between the two
avidly listening students with little discernible effect. 'I'm afraid I can't see it either, professor.' remarked Thatcherbite, the lankier and far spottier of the
two. 'Ach!' spluttered Lugbender, throwing his hands up into the air in mock
despair at the latent stupidity displaying itself before him, 'Why can
you not see the obvious?' One of the hands fell back into his lap, but the other continued to spin
lazily around in mid-air instead.
Showing off its utter contempt for the apparently
incontrovertible laws of physics it performed a stately victory roll
before slowly spiralling down to land with a soft thump in the sugar
bowl at the centre of the small table about which they all sat.
Dorkslinger dutifully reached over and handed it back to the
professor, thereby avoiding a potentially quite excruciatingly embarrassing
few moments. 'Ah, thank you. I really
must get these things fixed on properly.
Now, where was I? Ah
yes. Think of the fourth
dimension as a transparent cube with a block of solid light at its
putative centre. This
light block represents our three dimensional universe, and all the
events that occur within the light block do so simultaneously, but
each perceptual entity within the light block only experiences these
events from from one moment to the next, thus giving it the illusion
of of moving in a linear sequentiality which it experiences as the passing
of time. From the fourth
dimension a perceptual entity's life-span would look like a tangled
piece of spaghetti formed of light, but from the entity's three
dimensional point of view it would only experience the spaghetti
one tiny slice at a time.
'Now, some scientists and
philosophers have taken this to mean that all events in the universe
are pre-determined, but this does not prove to be the case.
If we take at random any point along an entity's piece of
spaghetti, then at that precise point an infinity of probable
realities (or lines of spaghetti if you prefer) radiate away into the
future, while the past remains a solid fixed one-piece of spaghetti.
Thus, events that that have already occurred perceptually are
fixed and unchangeable, but events that have yet to occur are only
fixed by probability, and so are infinitely variable. 'It is all a question
of perception. The nature
of the universe depends entirely on how one perceives it. Simple,
yes?' Dorkslinger sucked at his bottom lip as he frantically tried to devise a
way of escaping from the professor's tea party without causing
terminal damage to his grades. 'I'm still a little fuzzy on this whole matchbox thing.'
said Thatcherbite. 'By the sacred hairs of Elton John!' cried Lugbender, and snatched up a
sugar cube which he held aloft. 'Within a single
molecule of this sugar the universe is mirrored in its entirety. We cannot understand it because we are within it!
Just like the notes in a piece of music cannot step back to
appreciate the the whole piece, neither can we.
In this case it is we who are the notes and the universe is the
music. Do you see?' Thatcherbite pursed his lips in a Herculean struggle for understanding. 'Hmm', he said, 'Are you trying to say that sugar cubes are are somehow
intrinsically connected to matchboxes.
Universally speaking of course?' Lugbender's face turned a deep shade of red and his large ears began to
tremble violently. 'Let me put it another way.' he said through gritted teeth, 'Every
person's mind, the way in which they think, affects the lines of
probability that are generated out before them.
For example, when you arose this morning the most probable
sequence of events before you would have involved going to eat
breakfast, off to lectures, coming here for tea, and then out tonight
to experiment with how much alcohol your body can absorb before it
ceases to function, yes?' Thatcherbite nodded carefully. 'But,' the professor went on, 'You have now now both irritated me to such
a degree that I am going to have to kill the pair of you, thus
demonstrating how your thoughts and actions this afternoon have
completely recalculated your probability lines towards, what this
morning, would have been a very improbable event.
Now do you see?!' Dorkslinger immediately fell backwards off his chair, his rational
capacity to gibber rendered temporarily inoperable by the sight of
Lugbender sweeping a huge double-headed battle-axe up from beneath the
table. Thatcherbite leapt back and cried, 'Aha!', an Uzi Mark 3 Body Splatterer
emerging from the folds of his voluminously baggy tee-shirt. 'Fooled ya, professor!', he
shouted triumphantly, 'Little did you know that I have a Relative
Probability Sequencing Calculator hidden in my room!' 'Damn you!' snarled Lugbender. 'Yes', said Thatcherbite, 'It warned me that something like this might
happen today professor, or should I say Alf Watkins, interplanetary
trickster, master of disguise, interstellar con-man and general
all-round galactic bamboozler!?' 'Buggerit!' growled Lugbender as he threw the axe down.
Dorkslinger abruptly launched himself vertical and kicked the
gun from Thatcherbite's hand, and in a deceptively impressive flurry
of arms and trench coat produced a viciously intimidating Husquarvana
Tech 4 Laz-Cannon from his boot-top. 'Hold it right there!' he bellowed, 'Very clever Thatcherbite, but not
clever enough, for I am the real Alf Watkins!' 'Oh no you're bloody not!' shrilled Lugbender indignantly. BOOM 'Hmm, as you've just vaporized the professor I suppose you must be the
real Alf Watkins.' conceded Thatcherbite. 'Bloody right matey-boy', said Dorkslinger, 'And now that you have
discovered my secret I'm afraid I cannot let you live any longer,
either.' 'Reasonable enough I suppose.' agreed Thatcherbite. BOOM Thatcherbite shook his head sadly. 'Just as well I sabotaged his gun this morning', he said, 'Stupid boy
should have known better than to mess with the real Alf Watkins.' And with that, Thatcherbite, or Alf, skipped out of the gardens and off
into the sunset, whistling gaily and musing, 'It's been an odd sort of a
day. Why, only this
morning I could have sworn that Alf Watkins was nothing more than a
phantom figure devised by the collective unconscious of a society too
well ordered and structured to produce a real Alf Watkins of its own.
Thus, it is forced to invent one in order to alleviate the
repressed wants and desires of a people who would ordinarily be too
frightened to challenge the system as individuals, and therefore live
out their feeble fantasies by proxy through the fictitiously awesome
adventures of Alf Watkins. And
now it seems that somehow, quite improbably, I have actually become
him. Very odd, but I can
see that it has got definite possibilities.
Oh yes, definite possibilities!' ENDS Posted 06/29/2002
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