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  • => What is Time?
  • ... time is developed in quite detailed fashion in the Futuhat, though it is scattered all around the book and not placed in specific parts, including even those chapters 59, 291 and 390 whose titles relate directly to time. The concept of time is needed to compare the sequence of events or m ...


  • => The Single Monad Model of the Cosmos
  • ... ficult symbolic language he usually used. Also, he didn't discuss this subject at length in any single place in his extant works--not even in chapters 59, 291 and 390 of the Futûhât whose titles relate directly to time--so we must piece together his overall cosmological understanding of ...


  • => TIME CHEST - 2.2 Ibn al-Arabi’s View of Time?
  • ... time is developed in quite detailed fashion in the Futuhat, though it is scattered all around the book and not placed in specific parts, including even those chapters 59, 291 and 390 whose titles relate directly to time. The concept of time is needed to compare the sequence of events or m ...


  • => The Single Monad Model
  • ... ficult symbolic language he usually used. Also, he didn't discuss this subject at length in any single place in his extant works--not even in chapters 59, 291 and 390 of the Futûhât whose titles relate directly to time--so we must piece together his overall cosmological understanding of ...


  • => SINGLE MONAD MODEL - 1. What is Time?
  • ... time is developed in quite detailed fashion in the Futuhat , though it is scattered all around the book and not placed in specific parts, including even those chapters 59, 291 and 390 whose titles relate directly to time. The concept of time is needed to compare the sequence of events or m ...


  • => SINGLE MONAD MODEL - PREFACE
  • ... difficult symbolic language he usually used. Also, he didn't discuss this subject at length in any single place in his extant works not even in chapters 59, 291 and 390 of the Futuhat whose titles relate directly to time so we must piece together his overall cosmological understanding of t ...


  • => DUALITY OF TIME - 4.2.6.4  Hierarchy of Divine Names
  • ... veloped in quite detailed fashion in the Meccan Revelations, though it is scattered all around the book and not placed in specific parts, including even those chapters 59, 291 and 390 whose titles relate directly to time. The concept of time is needed to compare the sequence of events or m ...



    Other Pages Related to Search Keywords:

    • ... Islamic Cosmology =>:

    • ... poetry: “the age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... Ibn Al-Arabi =>:

    • ... d Haj Yousef Search Inside this Book 4.2.6.4  Hierarchy of Divine Names We have already discussed the unique Unity of Allah and the diversity of His divine Names in section 1.3, but in IBN AL-ARABI ’s wider metaphysical perspective, the divine Names, just like the spiritual worl ...


    • ... Mohamed Haj Yousef =>:

    • ... e notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... Single Monad Model =>:

    • ... eason also, one of the other interesting names of the Single Monad is Everything, because it is actually creating every single thing, physical and metaphysical. This theory of creation, the SINGLE MONAD MODEL Model, is therefore the Theory of Everything; first because of the reality of the ...


    • ... Duality Of Time =>:

    • ... poetry: “the age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... Ultimate Symmetry =>:

    • ... poetry: “the age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... Cosmology =>:

    • ... off its surface and perhaps annihilating back again into their eternal source. As we have introduced in chapter III, this cosmological model combines together all the major views in modern cosmology, including the Steady State, the Oscillating Universe, and the Big Bang, and it goes beyon ...


    • ... Time =>:

    • ... œthe age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... Space-Time =>:

    • ... nd to the four Pillars and the seven Substitutes, mentioned above, are the divine origin of the four elements of Nature and the seven Days of the Week which are actually the seven levels of space-time that we shall explain in chapter V. Ibn al-Arabi talks about this hierarchy of the divine ...


    • ... Spacetime =>:

    • ... poetry: “the age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... Special Relativity =>:

    • ... poetry: “the age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... General Relativity =>:

    • ... inciple of least time or stationary action is derived. We talked about the principle of action in chapter II (section 15) and we have seen in chapter III how the various theories, including GENERAL RELATIVITY and Quantum Field Theory, applied this principle to formulate their mathematical ...


    • ... Quantum Mechanics =>:

    • ... lbeit a different kind of “Mind” at each level of manifestation. We will also see in chapter V how these concepts play an essential role in the Duality of Time interpretation of QUANTUM MECHANICS , and particularly on the effect of measurement and how the wave-function collapses ...


    • ... Quantum Field Theory =>:

    • ... r stationary action is derived. We talked about the principle of action in chapter II (section 15) and we have seen in chapter III how the various theories, including General Relativity and QUANTUM FIELD THEORY , applied this principle to formulate their mathematical models, but we will see ...


    • ... Speed Of Light =>:

    • ... , rather than “from nothing”, and from this essential difference we will be able to find the ratio between “one” and “infinity”: and also calculate the speed of light. 4.3.1  The Primordial Cloud Ibn al-Arabi’s Universe comprises both the p ...


    • ... Symmetry =>:

    • ... poetry: “the age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    • ... Supersymmetry =>:

    • ... poetry: “the age has curved on us and bent” [I.202.7], so as we notice he referred to the Age, instead of simple time, because as in modern physics and cosmology, the curvature o ...


    Welcome to the Single Monad Model of the Cosmos and Duality of Time Theory
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    Message from the Author:

    I have no doubt that this is the most significant discovery in the history of mathematics, physics and philosophy, ever!

    By revealing the mystery of the connection between discreteness and contintuity, this novel understanding of the complex (time-time) geometry, will cause a paradigm shift in our knowledge of the fundamental nature of the cosmos and its corporeal and incorporeal structures.

    Enjoy reading...

    Mohamed Haj Yousef


    Check this detailed video presentation on "Deriving the Principles of Special, General and Quantum Relativity Based on the Single Monad Model Cosmos and Duality of Time Theory".

    Download the Book "DOT: The Duality of Time Postulate and Its Consequences on General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics" or: READ ONLINE .....>>>>



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