From: Spudboy100@aol.com
Date: Thu Aug 08 2002 - 06:06:25 MDT
D. Broderick Offered:
<<which doesn't seem to me to follow at all, at all. If you need the ancient
cosmos to be in some kinda compressed state for c to be faster, I don't
think you'd be able to wiggle it now to skin thru faster. (BTW, this
general notion is embedded in TRANSCENSION, which gives something like 2
billion years as the age of the universe for just these kinds of reasons,
hee hee.)
Here's a sidebar:
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/08/07/1028157961167.html>>
Thanks, DB. The Age article was clearer then the other one I had read. But
mayhaps the variability of particles is accounted for because different
regions of space-time have different speed-limits? (Out past Mars there's no
speed limits ~Mojo Nixon) Or more likely, the speed of light will continue to
vary (oscillate) throughout space-time. One implication seems to be that the
"fabric of space-time seems to be fungible; by some supercivilization,
superforce, superman. This is the stuff that sweet dreams are made of.
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