122. Ese momento antes de la cata de vinos

Cuando se revisa que implementos de servicio como sacacorchos, cortagotas y servilletas estén disponibles. Cuando se verifica por penúltima vez la temperatura de los vinos y se discute con el…

Smartphone

独家优惠奖金 100% 高达 1 BTC + 180 免费旋转




Finding A Way To Understand Time

Exploring time and the nature of consciousness

30 miles northwest of San Antonio stands the small German enclave of Boerne, with its population of 10,000, mostly the descendants of German immigrants who came to Texas in the 1850s. In this most unlikely of locations, not far from the Kendall County Courthouse, in a group of non-descript warehouses near an old railway station, stood the laboratory of Parthian Electronics Company, an independent subsidiary of the monolith Jamison Electronics Corporation. No one would have suspected that within the worn walls of the nearly 100-year-old structures, were hidden state-of-the-art scientific laboratories engaged in one of the most sophisticated scientific research projects in the country, financed by both government and non-government sources.

Among the many special facilities was a laboratory run by Jacob Isaacson devoted exclusively to the study of space/time. Employed among the five scientists working on this special project was the former classmate of Richard Timberlane, Ryan Tomlinson, who was working on a project along with Andrew Crawford, to determine the variability of time. Each of them worked at the southeast corner of the building in two six by six cubicles. They were as different in temperament and approach as any two people could be, but they had accomplished many breakthroughs in the two years they had been working together.

“I’ve finished my calculations,” Ryan spoke.

He was sitting at his desk staring at the monitor of UNIX band server, which he would use for running his algorithms.

“I am becoming even more convinced every day that time itself is a circle coming back in on itself,” Ryan explained. “Now it is a matter of finding the midpoint and permanence of the various circles of experience we call time.”

“I still fall back on my neurophysiological training,” his colleague Andrew responded. “All human perception, including time is merely a creation of our brains.” He hesitated. “And our brains work on the principle of cycles, frequencies, rhythms, whatever you want to describe it.” He paused. “I wanted to tell you about a very interesting anomaly I discovered in the last series of tests we ran last Friday. You know how the aperture of a camera controls…

Add a comment

Related posts:

Pokojnici bez groba

Crnjanski je vjerovao da će život, u cjelini, jednoga dana, početi da slijedi umjetnost. Veliki primjeri iz književnosti, književni junaci, bili su i do sada, mi i ne znamo koliko, putokazi prema…

Your guide to UCoin Ecosystem

You can become our project’s token holder now, and there are a lot of ways you can do it. The UCoin token is the fuel and centerpiece of our large ecosystem, but now let’s look at the features it has…

Set the stop watch down

Those of us who stray too far behind or jump too far forward are left to feel out of sync with the group. But I am here to tell you that the times in my life I’ve been made to feel “too young, too…