There is a concept that there are different vibrational levels/speeds of the matter in the universe, often called layers, planes, or more accurately densities. It's like having different layers in Photoshop. They reside in the same place, but they are different 'layers' or 'planes' , and you can view them separately.
Alot of people confuse the concept of densities with that of dimensions (the norm length-wide-height, or 1st,2nd, 3rd). It's like confusing x and y pixels with the layers. The two concepts are often fused or used synonymously, despite being very different, probably making it very confusing for those unfamiliar with densities.
My question is how many people understand the difference between these concepts?
2006-06-23
16:44:37
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6 answers
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asked by
jft1217
2
in
Science & Mathematics
➔ Physics
Edited details to clarify (hard to do with limited space)
By dimensions I mean normal length-width-height, 1st,2nd,3rd.
By Density I do not refer to to concept of atoms being densely or sparsely spaced together.
I am refering to the idea that there are different groupings of wavelengths of the vibration of matter. Imagine a radio dial. We are tuned into one station, one frequency. But if you could tune into a higher or lower frequency, you could access and interact with a different material reality. These different 'stations' are what I'm referring to by densities. The slower the wavelength of the matter, the more tangible and solid it all becomes. It becomes much more DENSE. Hense these 'stations' are can be called densities, or also frequencies. But sometimes these are called dimensions, which are simply what the name implies. The L-W-H dimensions of the reality we're in. Time is simply the progression of the wavelengths.
2006-06-23
18:16:14 ·
update #1