A question of great importance

Transient001

Quantum Scribe
Friends of EarthTR125.0121

The other day while I was traveling in the Hourglass towards the Egeresti Star System a question suddenly popped into my mind. You see, and please bear with me for the time being, even at the speed of light the journey there took a little more than two weeks. The careful reader might already notice the central idea of my question.

While traveling there, an interesting thought occurred to me. For eons humanity has thought about light and its foreboding speed as the Maxima or ultimate particle, thus limiting their minds to forces even beyond that. It is quite clear that most of what physicist dreamed about during the sixties and seventees are now sound scientific facts.

My thought took me even further. I thought that there most be a whole array of particles out there. Quantum physics had delved into the realm of micro universes and micro structures, probability and things that are not there. Taking into consideration that our universe could well be yet another micro particle within a greater structure, we have gone the wrong way by exploring the realm of the smaller things. However, there is a realm of really big things out there, where a single particle is bigger than our own universe.

We could actually employ super particles from the outside multiverse to actually move faster than even the speed of light. Imagine that; a particle as big as our universe going from one side to the other in mere seconds. The thought is compelling.

Let me know what you think.

Until later becomes now!!!!
 
What was the question?

It seems that is something to ponder about how small things can be greater things. And how not to focus on light as the end all.

Anyways that was a good thought, I think, but definitely no question.

Thanks.
 
One of the most mind numbing prospects is that our universe is actually part of an atom in another universe.....which in turn is part of an atom in another universe.....and so on ad infinitum.

That would mean there's 10 trillion universes in the full stop at the end of this sentence.
 
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