![]() "About this title" may belong to another edition of this title. Now he acts as a personal coach, teaches creativity, and runs his own graphics and interior design firm. Gary has been involved in the consciousness movement since the mid-seventies and has worked with several personal growth organizations. in Art from Chico State University and taught Art for several years in Quincy Junior/ Senior High School in Northern California. Gary Whitney was born and raised in California. She had her first showing as a psychic artist in June of 1998. in Interior Desgin and is presently working as an interior designer for a San Francisco architectural firm. Monica graduated from San Jose State University with a B.S. She started to experience inner visions in the mid eighties and began to develop as a spiritual healer and psychic artists in the following years. Monica Szu-Whitney was born and raised in Burma and immigrated to California in 1975. The beings in this book live far from us in actual time-space and are hard to see, but their destinies and ours are intertwined, and they bear critical messages for all inhabitants of the Earth. Through the admittedly imperfect tools of our minds and 'imaginality' they have glimpsed the inhabitants of that domain known as hyperspace, subspace, or the astral realm and they have presented us with their remarkable portraits and words. This phenomenon also generated enough power to fracture a bubble in real space, allowing the destruction to be viewed from multiple planets outside. If, however, we found a way to interact with these dimensions, we might be able to access the properties that make up an invisible hyperspace that is simply another layer of the universe.For an era flooded with icons of almond-eyed aliens, stock angels, and computer-generated Martians, as well as the disappointingly pious sermons of Pleiadians and Sirians, Monica Szu-Whitney and Gary Whitney have opened a window into the actual vastness of the universe. This event sent the combined energy harvested from a star through hyperspace using an artificially created tunneling effect, allowing it to reach multiple star systems regardless of their distance. The manifolds that make up these dimensions are apparently less than 10^-33 centimeters across, so obviously they are smaller than what our most powerful microscopes can see. The four dimensions we know actually conceal six other dimensions that are curled up. An offshoot of string theory, called superstring theory (think: Lutheranism), suggests that there could be 10 dimensions because of the way strings warp time and space around themselves. That sounds like bullshit, but it isn’t, depending on how you feel about string theory, the idea that the physical world is made up of a framework of tiny, one-dimension string particles that shape spacetime and interact with one-another to form what we might call existence. These higher dimensions could make it possible for hyperspace to exist. Some physicists, after all, believe there are several more dimensions past the four we know of. There are some theories of hyperspace that are tied to speculative yet supported science. Maybe the physics of hyperspace work differently such that a ship’s propulsion has compounded effects. ![]() Perhaps in the fourth dimension, time is indiscreet and jumps between points in such as way that it allows a ship to achieve movement without velocity. Hyperspace seems to allow ships to foreshorten the shortest distance between A and B. What if you weren’t limited to 4D spacetime? The idea of hyperspace is based on the presumption that there is a separate region of spacetime beyond the limits of four dimensions. Nothing moves quite at the speed of light other than, well, light. ![]() But the larger questions remains, what is hyperspace? How does it physically operate? And is hyperspace something that could be real? In the normal four dimensions that make up spacetime as we know it, the shortest path between two points is a straight line, and the fastest way to travel across that distance is to move at the speed of light. Exactly what that means, presumably varies from fictional universe to fictional universe - there aren’t a lot of details given. Hyperspace is accessible to ships that have hyperdrives. This blurred line visual shorthand for interstellar travel is not science fact, but it isn’t purely science fiction either. But one of the genre’s classic tropes for making interstellar travel possible is worth a second look: hyperspace. Some writers favor wormholes, some filmmakers go in for time dilation, some graphic novelists use warp drives that folds space time up - the list of possibilities, unencumbered by physics, are endless. The science fiction canon is thick with ideas about how to make faster-than-light travel possible.
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