
In my last meditation, I linked time with memory, morphic resonance and torsion.
The meditation ended with a reference to the relationship between the double helix spiral of DNA, the spiraling shape of torsion fields, and the nonlocal broadcast of morphic resonance throughout nature, all of which are essentially expressions of time.
The Directionality of Time
“Let us now imagine that time has stopped. What happens? Our heart cannot beat, and we cannot take a breath, as motion seems to be linked with time.”
—Dr. Ibrahim Karim1
In science and elsewhere, time is typically associated with change and motion. Soviet astrophysicist Nikolai Kozyrev took this a step further by proposing that time possesses a "course" or "directionality" that distinguishes causes from effects.
Before Kozyrev came to this conclusion, however, English astrophysicist Arthur Eddington introduced the term "arrow of time"2 and explicitly connected it to the second law of thermodynamics, which states that entropy (disorder) in an isolated system tends to increase over time.
He argued that the irreversible increase in entropy provides a physical basis for the unidirectional flow of time, thereby distinguishing the past from the future.
Kozyrev extended this distinction to the difference between causes and effects, and experimentally demonstrated that entropy does not appear to increase throughout the universe due to a counterbalancing effect from an opposite and complementary force that he associated with an increase in “time density” or order and which others have referred to as negentropy or syntropy.
The Shape of Time
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