Wave Theory and Relationships Sep 5, 2002, 9:20p
* The Wave Theory of Interaction
Each person is an irregular, chaotic wave buzzing through the world. With each interaction, however minute, the wave is affected, changed. In this way, every interaction can be defined as the interaction of two waves: one wave is you and the other wave is the object. I guess this is just an advanced visualization of state theory. Each person's, each object's state is visualized as a wave. This wave is defined as having a frequency, amplitude, and direction, in 3 dimensions. The 4th dimension of time is accounted for in the frequency component. All in all, there are 5 dimensions. Each wave interaction can be viewed as a collision, with each wave's 5 dimensions potentially being affected by the collision. For example, consider a room with just yourself and a rock. By gazing at the rock, an interaction/collision takes place. This interaction affects my wave because I am in some way changed from the previous moment's existence after experiencing the rock. The rock's wave, however, would apparently be unaffected, because it is not in any known way affected by my gaze. My gaze is a passive act, and therefore the rock's wave stays the same. However, if I were to pick up the rock, both of our wave's would be altered.
This theory, if more developed, may prove useful to creating a functional approximative model of the chaotic complexity of our deterministic world. It may even be able to incorporate quantum mechanics and relativity in some, hopefully not pseudo-scientific, way.
* Many people treat relationships like consumable garbage. When it's useful, you use it. When it's outlived its use, you toss it. Garbage, however, won't die so simply. It needs to be buried or burned. In this way, past relationships must also be buried or burned.
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