More on mandalas

From: Eric Hawthorne <egh.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Tue, 11 May 2004 01:17:54 -0700

The other thing to note about mandalas is that there can be more than
one possible pattern
that would maintain order and recursive complexity as it expands outward
(i.e. forward in time).
However, an observer subpattern embedded in one mandala (and created by
ITS rules of order)
can only see whatever order is in its own mandala pattern.

A different mandala pattern, with slightly different rules, or
with a different initial pattern, might arguably contain a White Rabbit
subpattern, but alas the White Rabbit
cannot be seen be our first observer, and vice versa, because the
attempt to see the contents of another
mandala pattern would necessarily destroy our own mandala pattern.

Whatever (computational paths) would destroy the self-consistent mandala
pattern of our universe are
inherently unobservable by us. One way of looking at it is that light
seen by an observer A can only
illuminate A's universe pattern. That's kind of a definition of light,
and of A, and of "universe pattern",
all at once.
Received on Tue May 11 2004 - 04:24:24 PDT

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