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Non-trivial Time Flows in Anticipation and Action Revealed by Recent Advances in Natural Science, Framed in the Causality Network of Differential Ontology

p. 141-158

Abstract

The article reports some far-reaching results from Chris Illert's research in conchology. Illert discovered that growth of all sea shells follow a universal algorithm. This discovery presupposed a lifting from Euclidean space to a 6D iso-Euclidean space executed by means of hadronic mechanics and the corresponding new mathematics initiated by Santilli. Illert also found that growth of branching sea shells required the existence of non-trivial categories of time with information jumping forward in conventional time, as well as backward from there; this last time category implying the existence of isodual spacetime connected to the antimatter 'universe'. Some other recent advances in theoretical and experimental science with radical implications for the comprehension of time are also reported. These findings are then approached from the differential ontology and causality nexus of our own philosophical informatics, with the aim of comprehending more complex anticipatory systems as integrating more complex 'objective' non-trivial time flows with 'subjective' time flows from the organism's modelling faculty.

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References

Bibliographical reference

Stein Erik Johansen, « Non-trivial Time Flows in Anticipation and Action Revealed by Recent Advances in Natural Science, Framed in the Causality Network of Differential Ontology », CASYS, 22 | 2008, 141-158.

Electronic reference

Stein Erik Johansen, « Non-trivial Time Flows in Anticipation and Action Revealed by Recent Advances in Natural Science, Framed in the Causality Network of Differential Ontology », CASYS [Online], 22 | 2008, Online since 19 September 2024, connection on 27 December 2024. URL : http://popups.uliege.be/3041-539x/index.php?id=3449

Author

Stein Erik Johansen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Social Anthropology Institute for Basic Research, US, Division of Physics Home address: Jacob Rolls gt. 22, N-7016 Trondheim, Norway

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Copyright

CC BY-SA 4.0 Deed