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This alone could suggest one of two things, namely that the “arrow of time” surely has more granularity to it, granularity that features a “golden-ratio” algorithm, or space is a particular matrix that encodes the golden ratio by its own constitution.
Time is intrinsically tied to change.
all evidence suggests that the golden ratio is a process of “growth” in time and not an immediate manifestation of space itself
if you google "golden ratio discovered in a quantum world" then the article introduces how that works, could work.
I'm suggesting with the golden ratio as the article also highlighted is that for each frame of reference of time only one result of the golden ratio is expressed, not two result, not a full golden ratio footprint.
Yet the point I was making was that with those frequencies in two different notes there exists that golden ratio resonance.
HI, I'm a new member. Good to be here; "Opportunity" in honour of the MER-B......still going.....I have a question about how we have used the idea of "time" in history....one dimensional. The question is, "if time could have more dimensions, for instance if it represented a type of mathematical algorithm that always had a split choice of possibility in 3-d space (giving "effective" attitude to the uncertainty principle), would that change the Planck scale equations?"The idea of time being a mathematical algorithm proposing two opportunities in space with each frame of overall time-reference is unheard of. It's not linear time. But has anyone proposed the idea in theoretical physics?If we looked at how time moves in nature, as growth patterns, we would know that with the uncertainty principal, tied in with quantum entanglement, any reference in space from a set position of time only holds a certain one result, yet the opposite result can exist. Is that a feature of space or time?Think of it this way...as opposed to thinking time has to obey the idea of space-relativity, linearly so, a space that decides that its own position is based on observational references (?), why not let "time" be an observational reference more in line with Brownian motion equations, and not space?....that the observational reference of time is tuned to the chance played with Brownian motion, as an algorithm....I'm not sure mathematics can resolve space using the ideas of relativity. Using two different references of space as 3-d in the one time.......(?) wouldn't it be better to consider time itself, the process of spatial change, is an operator itself that has choices? Nothing completely "linear"? And here of course the choice may or may not be intelligent. It may be as simple as a "golden ratio" algoirithm, a Fibonacci sequence.Yet still the question beckons, what is the case for "one dimensional" time?
My argument has been though changing the idea of time "could" bring significance to the golden best tool we have, as yet, discovered with which we can gain understanding of the Universe. If the “golden ratio” helps with our understanding, so well and good, but let’s not try to read anything causative into that. ratio, especially if an algorithm for time represented the golden ratio.