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Timewave Theory
Emergent behavior from complex systems, elementally
founded upon fundamental, indivisible, and subatomic
elements presents a pattern that if we stare into
far enough we can see all of reality imprinted
inside it. To a certain degree, everything has
analogous properties, bearing elements of likeness,
within a family of self-similar attributes. Time,
as contemporary Westerners organize it, breaks
into segmented parts: milliseconds, seconds, minutes,
hours, days, months, years. We know this system
to be flawed; within our 365 days per year model,
we are occasionally required to modify a month
with a given extra day here and there. Our flawed
measurement of time differs from saying that time
itself is flawed. Time appears to be mutable,
or at least at times bent and yet time is not
a thing, it is not material— meeting at
the cusp of space in a fractional universe, exerting
force ever forward (to our perceptions). Chaos
reveals itself as a dominant force in the universe,
with its strange attractors allowing the more
admirable and beautiful natural phenomena to occur.
Is there perhaps some attractor pulling us forward
through time?
Modern physicists and ancient Asian philosophies
agree— time is change. Time is flux, from
Heraclitus to the Tao Te Ching. The I Ching, or
The Book of Changes has long led as guidance to
Oriental cultures, originating in China. Though
artificial and of human conception, the I Ching,
if its mathematical and qualitative features are
validated (besides its efficacy as a work of art
and poetry), is a direct product of the complex
interactions of the people who created it and
their understanding of time.
The King Wen sequence of the I Ching divides
into 64 hexagrams, each a combination of six lines
holding the properties of yin or yang. Each hexagram,
according to the tradition, represents the archetypes
of human interactions. Assuming that the world
is governed by seemingly random events and causality,
the chaos in hexagram selection by the I Ching
diviner compliments the chaotic nature of reality,
thus tapping in to its very nature allowing insight
to life's possibilities. The I Ching influenced
and confounded such modern intellectuals as the
psychologist and mystic Carl Jung, Philip K. Dick
the author and cosmic by-product, and most relevant
to the theories discussed here, Terence McKenna.
Terence McKenna was a psychonautical explorer,
a special kind of genius who believed in the power
of psychedelics to unlock the mind's ability to
ascertain the secrets of the universe. If anything
can be learned through the theories of complexity,
it is the interconnectedness and gestalt through
all things. Through the use of psilocybin-containing
fungi and DMT-containing aboriginal mixtures,
McKenna began formulating a theory of time that
at first was very intuitive and abstract. Through
the aid of his ethnobotanist brother, Dennis McKenna,
morphogenetic fields theorist Rupert Sheldrake,
and chaos scientist Ralph Abraham, McKenna further
clarified his theory of novelty with a refined
mathematical base.
A few basic terminologies must be established
so that I am making sense in my descriptions here.
First and foremost, I establish that my knowledge
of mathematics is limited to pre-calculus. My
knowledge of chaos theory and fractals are limited
to the handful of books and classes I've taken
on the subject. I am no physicist— just
a guy with a sincere interest in reality, perhaps
more open-minded than I should be. I make no claims
that these theories are entirely scientifically
sound, nor do I believe in them any more than
I believe in a time model without structure. As
humans, we are pattern-forming creatures, and
for our own personal comfort we tend to invent
rationalizations of the universe that fit within
a model that can make us happy— that says
something is happening beyond randomness. As I
understand complexity theory, it only further
enhances the arguments that can be made here&mash;
that time and a fractional imprint could possibly
dictate causality.
Timewave One is the evolved theory, as it stands
today. Through many revisions by the meticulous
investigations of mathematicians Matthew Watkins
and John Sheliak, it has evolved into more than
just an abstract psychedelic whim. Consider that
like light, time fluctuates in a waveform, albeit
one more complicated than one of such simplicity
as a sine wave. This wave is a fractal, wherein
the wave when plotted over time (x) remains the
same shape regardless of whether time is seen
as a large portion of time or a smaller unit.
In this graph y would represent novelty, or the
occurrence of time.
According to Alfred North Whitehead:
Creativity is the principle of novelty. Creativity
introduces novelty into the content of the many,
which are the universe disjunctively. The creative
advance is the application of this ultimate principle
of creativity to each novel situation which it
originates. The ultimate metaphysical principle
is the advance from disjunction to conjunction,
creating a novel entity other than the entities
given in disjunction. The novel entity is at once
the togetherness of the many which it finds and
also it is one among the disjunctive many which
it leaves; it is a novel entity, disjunctively
among the many entities which it synthesizes.
The many become one, and are increased by one.
In their natures, entities are disjunctively many
in process of passage into conjunctive unity.
Thus the production of novel togetherness is the
ultimate notion embodied in the term concrescence.
These ultimate notions of production of novelty
and concrete togetherness are inexplicable either
in terms of higher universals or in terms of the
components participating in the concrescence.
The analysis of the components abstracts from
the concrescence. The sole appeal is to intuition.
On the timewave's graph, periods of high novelty
are where key events in history have taken place.
McKenna's plotting, through his Timewave Zero
software developed by John Sheliak, indicates
at its highest novelty points key moments in history,
such as the formation of the sun, the earth, and
onward.
When looked at over a smaller timescale, the
graph repeats itself with new key points.
The graph presents time over a scale of 6 billion
years, or the same illustrates the last 94 million
years. Or one can leap ahead to the past 360 years;
the timewave remains the same as key events are
plotted according to McKenna (which I admit may
be the more subjective, arbitrary flaw of the
theory):
The most compelling piece of information within
these graphs is the end point at 2012. According
to the software McKenna used, and the information
supposedly released upon him by the collective
unconscious (or the logos) was a future end date
in that year, precisely December 21, 2012. This
end date is not the Armageddon usual in end-of-the-world
theories; instead it is the point of highest novelty
throughout time. This could be interpreted as
the most major paradigm shift we have ever known,
and limiting it only to humankind would be folly.
McKenna has theorized that it may be the year
we make contact, or realize some means to transverse
space and time, or artificial intelligence becoming
such a reality that it becomes an omega point
of sorts for the universe. His personal conviction,
and also the one I most subscribe to if I were
subscribing to any of this, is a return to the
Invisible Landscape, a means to leave our fleshy
bodies behind and become one with the cosmos.
Rupert Sheldrake's morphogenetic field theory
here enters into the equation. The morphogenetic
field is the idea of the collective unconscious
married to physics, and while highly experimental
and without verifiable proof, anyone with any
serious encounters with psychedelic spiritual
plants like DMT, Salvia Divinorum, and psilocybin
have come into contact with this field, and its
morphic resonance within us has been more real
than any hallucination-model would suggest. It
is a shame that most psychedelic research in this
country has been stifled over the years, and such
a social stigma has been placed upon their use.
One need just mention the word psychedelic and
all their research flies out the window as incredible.
Ralph Abraham hypothesizes 2012 as the strange
attractor time has been following all along, that
we are being pulled towards this point through
complexity.
A means to discovering this pull may be within
the supposedly-reflexsive nature of the I Ching.
One may attribute this ability to the controversial,
experimental, quite possibly false but unfalsfiable
theory of the morphogenetic field. From this field,
it could be speculated, the ancients had withdrawn
their knowledge and encoded within the fortune-telling
device. It is interesting to note than independent
to Terence McKenna's ruminations on the subject,
the Mayan calendar had a projected end date of
2012 as well. This corroborating evidence further
suggests the possibility of a morphic resonance
through time of this end point.
The Timewave theory is not without its criticism.
In 1994, Matthew Watkins raised an issue with
what he thought to be arbitrary construction of
McKenna's math. Later, at least according to McKenna,
the mathematical errors were corrected in the
computer program. According to Watkins, "The
timewave is a mathematical function defined by
applying a 'fractal transform' to a piecewise
linear function. The latter function is an expression
of 384 'data points' (positive integer values)
derived from the King Wen sequence." Watkins'
objection was that at some point in the math,
numbers are brought to the -1nth power. He saw
no clear reason why. The mathematician who wrote
the computer software called this the half twist.
Despite his doubt in the significance of the timewave
itself, Watkins says "It wouldn't surprise
me if a fractal map of temporal resonance was
encoded into the King Wen sequence, just as it
wouldn't surprise me if something quite remarkable
does occur on December 21, 2012. The world can
be a very strange place, and we all have much
to learn. McKenna's hyper-imaginative speculation
has fired the imagination of many. With this particular
'theory' he has spread awareness of the I Ching
and the Mayan calendar, both fascinating and poorly
understood systems of ancient human thought. I
should therefore end by suggesting that the remainder
of his published thought should not be dismissed
as a result of my findings which are discussed
here."
But these are just words; these are not necessarily
belief. I find these ideas incredibly fascinating,
and only wish I could understand the math to any
degree. The concept of a novelty wave, oriented
with time is yet another attractive alternative
to God and destiny; an endpoint both terrifies
and excites, because it's the end of one thing,
and the beginning of another. |