Re: RS2 Tutorial Book
Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2018 2:18 pm
I was thinking more about Sun's comments on the association of yin-yang with time-space, and think it may be best to drop that association, altogether, because it is observer-dependent.
I've made this diagram of the mathematical relations of the 4 regions (boxes), 2 sectors (colors red/blue) and the unit speed (conjugate) and unit boundary (inverse).
That left me with where to stick "equivalent space," the connection between the time-space region and time region that forms the material sector, and "equivalent time," the connection between the space-time region and space region that forms the cosmic sector. It is the center 4-arrow--for which the word "equivalent" does not seem appropriate. Mathematically, it is the "reciprocal conjugate," of which there appears to be no unique term for, with perhaps "tao," translations of which indicate it is a "path, route or road"... this "equivalent" term does seem to fit that description, being the path or route to physical manifestation.
Open to suggestions for this concept, as Tao is usually associated with a doctrine or philosophy, not the mathematical concept of connectivity.
This is about the cleanest way I can express the relations between regions, sectors and boundaries:
I've made this diagram of the mathematical relations of the 4 regions (boxes), 2 sectors (colors red/blue) and the unit speed (conjugate) and unit boundary (inverse).
That left me with where to stick "equivalent space," the connection between the time-space region and time region that forms the material sector, and "equivalent time," the connection between the space-time region and space region that forms the cosmic sector. It is the center 4-arrow--for which the word "equivalent" does not seem appropriate. Mathematically, it is the "reciprocal conjugate," of which there appears to be no unique term for, with perhaps "tao," translations of which indicate it is a "path, route or road"... this "equivalent" term does seem to fit that description, being the path or route to physical manifestation.
Open to suggestions for this concept, as Tao is usually associated with a doctrine or philosophy, not the mathematical concept of connectivity.
This is about the cleanest way I can express the relations between regions, sectors and boundaries: