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Skip to content THE NOVAK FILES Compilation of letters to George The Novak Files Compilation of letters to George * Home * Podcasts * Contact RALPHS’ VIEW NovakFiles April 29, 2024 0 Comments Dear George, If you and Ralph are standing shoulder to shoulder 10 feet above where something is happening, you see the event just as soon as the light that composes the image arrives at your eyes. Let’s say it is a motorcycle accident. If light travels at a speed of 186,282 miles per second or 186,282,000,000 miles per milliseconds it would take 987,543,000.000 milliseconds for you and Ralph to see the crash. Now, let’s say you are 20 feet away. Everything we just said is the same. The only difference is that the image arrives at your eyes a little bit later. In this case it would take the image 876,987,654,000,000 milliseconds to reach you and Ralph. Of course, it is such a minute difference that you being a human do not perceive any difference. However; you may not note as much detail in the image but you still see the event because the scene is still traveling through the atmosphere and reaches your eyes at the 20-foot point. Now let’s say you two are 50 feet, (432,345,546,567,000,000 milliseconds) away. You have trouble making out a lot of the details because it is just too far away. But Ralph doesn’t because Ralph is an angle. Now let’s say we are now at 5,000 feet, (987,987,098,000,000) above the accident. At this point you are out of the picture because you are a human and humans can’t see detail from that far away. For you to see an object so far away it has to be really big. However; Ralph may not have any difficulty because he can fly really fast and get up close, and get a good look at it. Now we are 5 miles, (654,75,098,000,000,000) above the fatal motorcycle accident. The image has traveled through the earth’s atmosphere and passes up to the 5-mile point. If Ralph is hanging out at that level and he looks down, he will see the event. It is important to note that he is not seeing a replay of the event. He is seeing the actual event as it happens. The event happened some 987876544,ooooo,000 milliseconds ago but the image is just now arriving at Ralph’s eyes where he is now, 5 miles above the earth. Question: If you and Ralph are not there to observe the happening does the image still travel though time? The answer is obvious. Yes, and it is still traveling through time even as we speak. In fact, there is no cut-off where it discontinues its journey. It is a continuum that travels though the earth’s atmosphere and on into deep space and on and on and on. We can confirm that this is the case because we see stars that are no longer there. They have burned out millions of years ago and have disintegrated and no longer exist. What we are seeing now is its light image that is just now arriving at our eyes at the distance where we are now, on earth. Now we are at 25,000, (564,987,765,654,987.000,000,000,000) miles high. Nothing has changes. But what about Ralph? Can Ralph fly back down to the death sight and view the accident along with you as it’s happening? No! The accident is in the past. Nether of you can go back in time. But wait! The image is still accessible. If Ralph, not you, want to see the motorcycle crash happen, he can just go to where the event is happening on the continuum and look down. An angle that is looking at an event on the continuum has to ride the advancing image by traveling along with it as it moves through time and space. A good analogy would be of a film editor. He has a ‘motorcycle accident’ somewhere in his raw footage. He is not sure where it is but he thinks it is somewhere in the middle of the spool of tape. So he loads up the magnetic tape into his editing machine and fast-forwards to where he thinks it might be. He is moving forward in time until he arrives at the scene. This analogy is of an analogue editing system which means that he has to fast forward and rewind in order to move through time where each scene occurs in real time. Maybe angles are not analogue like humans, where all events are contiguous. Maybe angles are digital. Let’s transfer our analogue tape to a video digital editing system. Now there is no need to fast-forward or rewind to go to a certain frame. All the editor need do is type in the frame number he wants and voila! That frame appears on the monitor immediately. So my conclusion is that humans are analogue and angles are digital. So, if you plan on following a continuum in order to look at an event, it is better if you are an angle. That way you don’t have to keep traveling back and forth and up and down the continuum to go to the event you are looking for. Since you are digital you can go immediately to the place where you want to be with no time-lag in-between. That way you can move through space and time with ease and therefore keep up with the continuously advancing scene wherever it may be in the universe. …No problem! This ease of locomotion makes it easy for someone like Ralph to learn all about human history. He doesn’t have to have someone explain it to him or read a book with illustrations. Isn’t he glad he’s an angle! For example, if Ralph wonders what really happened when Abraham raised the knife to put Isaac to death, he can just go watch it happen for himself. It’s Ralphs’ view. Your friend, Ford. The Novak Files Compilation of letters to George * * * * * Copyright © All rights reserved | Blogus by Themeansar. Search for: