Jump to content

Time Cube: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Caseykcole (talk | contribs)
Revert to revision 275320792 dated 2009-03-06 03:33:21 by Frehley using popups
Line 22: Line 22:


Other points made on Ray's website include repeated assertions that all academic establishments are "evil" for not teaching Time Cube and that readers who do not agree or are ignorant of his ideas "deserve death".
Other points made on Ray's website include repeated assertions that all academic establishments are "evil" for not teaching Time Cube and that readers who do not agree or are ignorant of his ideas "deserve death".


Although most of the claims and theories of the time cube go against established and accepted thinking, some are more conventional. For example, Ray makes the claim "A mother and baby are the same age, as a 1 day old baby has a 1 day old mother." This is correct, as a first-time mother will have been a mother for the same length of time as her baby has been alive.

The recurring theme of the four-corner day is also more conventionally explained in a diagram at the bottom of the second page which explains the theory thus - that 4 people living on the [[equator]] at 90 degrees to each other will each perceive the day at different times as the earth rotates once. In Ray's words - "Socrates has a mid day as Clinton has a sun down as Einstein has a midnight as Jesus has a sun up.", "Your midday is someone else's midnight, someone else's sundown and even someone else's sunup." The established use of [[Time zone|time zones]] is related to this theory, though there are more than 4 international time zones.


==Public debate of the concept==
==Public debate of the concept==

Revision as of 23:13, 9 March 2009

The layout (reduced) and writing style of the Time Cube website.

Time Cube is a website created by Gene Ray in 1997, where he sets out his proposed theory of everything, a description of the nature of the universe. The website uses a distinctive combination of colorful large-font text, occasional black-and-white drawings, obscure statements, and rather unconventional grammar. Its style has been widely parodied, giving rise to an internet phenomenon.[citation needed]

The Time Cube concept itself is the proposition that time is cubic, a set of ideas which are generally viewed as cryptic and ill-defined. It is a frequent target of Internet humor. Ray has challenged various authorities to debate the subject, but these challenges have generally been ignored or rejected.

Though he is often dismissed as a crank,[1] Ray is outspoken in defending Time Cube and refers to conspiracy theories in explaining why his ideas are not accepted. Ray often uses the word "evil" on his website to describe those who oppose or fail to understand his ideas. He also prophesies the "burning in hell" of not just those who oppose his ideas, but of anyone who is ignorant of them.

Ray proclaimed himself a "Doctor of Cubicism" in December 2002. He sometimes uses the title "Dr. Gene Ray - Cubic and Wisest Human".

The Time Cube concept

The following quotation captures both the style of Ray's writing and a major recurring theme of the Time Cube:

When the Sun shines upon Earth, 2 - major Time points are created on opposite sides of Earth - known as Midday and Midnight. Where the 2 major Time forces join, synergy creates 2 new minor Time points we recognize as Sunup and Sundown. The 4-equidistant Time points can be considered as Time Square imprinted upon the circle of Earth. In a single rotation of the Earth sphere, each Time corner point rotates through the other 3-corner Time points, thus creating 16 corners, 96 hours and 4-simultaneous 24 hour Days within a single rotation of Earth - equated to a Higher Order of Life Time Cube.

It appears that the main claim of Ray's ideas relates to the simultaneous existence of four days within a single rotation of Earth (noon to noon, midnight to midnight, sunrise to sunrise, and sunset to sunset) and the subsequent inference that the planet itself is not a physical "entity", as its hemispheres actually independently rotate in opposite directions and cancel out, as antipodes.

Ray also claims that well-established mathematical concepts are incorrect, for example operations on negative numbers:

-1 x -1= +1 is WRONG, it is academic stupidity and is evil. The educated stupid should acknowledge the natural antipodes of +1 x +1 = +1 and -1 x -1 = -1 exist as plus and minus values of opposite creation - depicted by opposite sexes and opposite hemispheres.

Other points made on Ray's website include repeated assertions that all academic establishments are "evil" for not teaching Time Cube and that readers who do not agree or are ignorant of his ideas "deserve death".

Public debate of the concept

Ray has claimed to offer $10,000 to any academic institution or professor who disproves Time Cube. Many academics have viewed the website as incoherent and not possible to evaluate scientifically, though Bei Dawei of Hsuan Chuang University in Taiwan has written favorably about Time Cube. The (possibly tongue-in-cheek) piece, titled "Proving Human Stupidity: Time Cube, Gnosis, and the Challenge of Radical Cosmology", compares Ray's achievements to those of the Greek astronomer Hipparchus.[2] Later on, the offer of $10,000 was reduced to $1,000.

Ray spoke at MIT in January 2002,[3] as part of MIT's annual Independent Activities Period, a one-month period where students can offer and take classes of widely varied topics, such as Einstein's relativity, astrology, or the Klingon language from Star Trek. He also spoke at Georgia Tech in April 2005.

References

  1. ^ Kelly, Matt (September 29, 2001). "Kelly's i: Site of the Day". The Daily Mirror. p. 23. YES, the guy's mad - but at least he's not boring. Check out the Time Cube rants. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ Bei, Dawei. ""Proving Human Stupidity": Time Cube, Gnosis, and the Challenge of Radical Cosmology" (PDF). Retrieved 2006-05-19.
  3. ^ "IAP 2002 Activity: Time Cube Lecture / Debate". Retrieved 2007-04-05.