I suggest this:

Subject: Dark matter
From: <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ">[EMAIL PROTECTED] </A> (Mark 
Constantino)
Date: 5/31/02 11:22 AM Pacific Daylight Time
Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Ash, black holes, that type of stuff.  Look for shadows.


Subject: Re: Layers of Reality
From: <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ">[EMAIL PROTECTED] </A> (Mark 
Constantino)
Date: 5/31/02 11:11 AM Pacific Daylight Time
Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>Or else I'm insane

I'm sane.  We may live in only 2 universes, but we also exist in at least two
layers of reality [wave, particle].

The joke is the wave layer.  As beings of waves, and products of the big bang,
a spherical explosion, God placed us in a big spherical pool of water with a
100% elastic wall that as time passes each wave hits and rebounds back towards
the center.  As waves do not interact with each other, the rebound, reflecting
directly back towards the center allows for contraction.  The edge of the
universe is therefore 100% dark.

The serious is the particle layer.  Spherical explosion, outward bound
particles.  However, since space is curved, I'm suggesting that expansion is 
at
the same time contraction.  I can't explain it graphically, it's very weird,
but makes sense, because we won't know when we hit center again until we get
there, then perhaps nothing, then perhaps it begins again.

I explained this elsewhere but I'll repeat:

As waves our perspective cannot perceive whether we are incoming or outgoing, 
nor when or where we hit the 100% elastic wall, because we cannot perceive or 
be affected by incoming or outgoing other waves.  Thus the edge of the 
universe, which is also the center, is dark.

As particles, space is curved, time is who knows what but linear with varying 
velocity, so a spherical explosion in curved space allows for the vector of 
expansion to also at the same time be the vector of contraction.  The edge of 
the universe is dark, but finite, only we cannot perceive the edge and 
center.  We will perhaps cease to exist when we get there, only to return in 
another Big Bang.  We can perceive that which is behind us [not dark] of 
course.  I guess this means that if stuff precedes us, though I'm thinking 
that that is impossible [relativity], and we see it start to disappear we're 
in trouble [we can't see stuff disappear because whatever we might think we'd 
be able to perceive has ceased to exist -- what remains is stuff telling 
about the ancient, already gone].

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