"I'm not exactly sure what kind of substance music is."
"This information cos from so cosmic consciousness."
"Cosmic consciousness includes forr high-dinsional beings. After they die or are destroyed, their consciousness fragnts float through the universe and can be captured by stars, allowing us to obtain related information. Most of our knowledge is acquired this way."
Golden Tree said so.
"Music is a crucial fulcrum in high-dinsional space."
"But this is all I know."
Ti is four-dinsional, music is five-dinsional.
Zhou Yi had an uncontrollable thought arise.
It seems these high-dinsional entities have quietly integrated into various fields of this low-dinsional world. They seem so natural, making one feel as if it should always have been this way.
"Could the entire 11 dinsions be encompassing the Earth?"
"Of course."
Golden Tree answered confidently.
"High dinsions must fold their dinsions and get decomposed by the space here when entering low dinsions. In this world, they may seem unremarkable, but in their high-dinsional space, they might easily be entities that can destroy a star system."
"Why do they all have to enter low dinsions?"
Zhou Yi asked in confusion: "Is it for traveling? Or to obtain sothing they want from other forms of life?"
"Humans often integrate into the low-dinsional worlds they create too, this is sothing you should be able to understand."
"Us?"
"Stories, movies, gas, comics, novels created by the old humanity are all lower-dinsional worlds you've created, aren't they? Yet you too are always imrsed in them, unwilling to co out."
"..."
Indeed.
Zhou Yi was montarily bewildered.
By this logic, humans have this tendency too.
"The high-dinsional world is extrely pressured and cruel, so they enter the low-dinsional world to obtain what they can't in their own world."
"I don't know about others, but this is indeed the case with ti creatures."
"In four-dinsional space, ti is everywhere, they exist like grains of sand in a desert, living precariously in space. They are nudged and moved by the universe's energy."
"Even the weakest among them are Transforrs, but there, they are like a drop in the ocean, unable to control themselves, just drifting in the imnse energy tides."
Zhou Yi imdiately understood.
Just like humans. In human society, living, competing, and working are ubiquitous, with pressure and negative emotions continually accumulating.
So humans choose their own low-dinsional worlds, entering artificial entertainnt worlds to relax and forget worries.
Ti creatures are just another kind of higher-dinsional human.
But that being said.
Ti Master seems rather different from traditional life forms.
Zhou Yi said: "Is Ti Master equivalent to a societal collective consciousness made up of ti creatures? Or a high-dinsional civilization made up of ti creatures?"
"That is a possible understanding."
"Ti Master is a life form with the scale of a star system, and the Solar System is just a part of its body."
"In fact, high and low dinsions can get along well because there's no conflict or contradictions. It's only among similar kinds that a potential resource competition relationship exists, which will erupt when resources are scarce and survival is difficult."
Zhou Yi agreed with the first part but disagreed with the latter half.
"Indeed, competition amongst similar kinds is inevitable due to the sa ecological niche. But if this competition can be maintained within controllable limits, it serves as a motivation for the whole group."
"It seems you lean towards the optimistic faction."
"What do you an?"
"In general, there's a different value perception within cosmic consciousness, where the optimistic faction believes that changing the world is hopeful, and that one should spare no effort even if only getting infinitely close to eternity."
"On the contrary, the pessimistic faction believes life is ultimately just a temporary existence, and nothing one does can escape the final chaos and extinction. Therefore, they choose to enjoy life, doing whatever makes them happy."
Golden Tree elaborated further.
"Two completely different cosmic views also give rise to entirely different outcos and behaviors."
"You are a Fire Gatherer, and String Civilization belongs to the Fire Thief, precisely because of this internal difference."
Zhou Yi was bewildered: "Is String Civilization a pessimistic faction?"
Seeing that they dominate the Heavenly People and Seeders, and even hunt the Golden Tree, Sun, and even attempt to capture the Ti Master, Zhou Yi thought it was an optimistic faction.
"The biggest feature of pessimistic factions is ignoring all existence outside of itself, acting solely for its own decisions. Their pessimism isn't about themselves, but towards the outside world."
Zhou Yi suddenly realized.
"Pessimistic factions consider the outside only as resources and enemies, while optimistic factions believe integrating into the outside is the way to go further. This is a fundantal difference."
"There is a large, unknown consciousness that says dinsions and life are inversely proportional. Both pessimistic and optimistic factions are its perceptions, let's call it the High-dinsional Naless One."
"Conventional wisdom suggests that the higher the dinsion, the higher the level of evolution, and the closer it is to the real universe."
"But the Naless One, having wandered through many dinsions, found that the reality is quite the opposite, counter-intuitive and against instinct."
"Life's innate instinct is a continuous process of moving from low dinsions to high dinsions."
"But, paradoxically, the lower the dinsion, the closer it is to the true universe."
"Simply put, one-dinsional is the true nature of the world, and two-dinsional, three-dinsional, four-dinsional, are derivative spaces born from it."
Zhou Yi was taken aback by this.
The concept of deriving multi-dinsional spaces was quite comprehensible.
After all, one-dinsional could be crudely visualized as a line, which makes up the planes of front and back, left and right, which is considered two-dinsional, then adding the direction of gravity up and down, commonly known as three-dinsional.
Reviews
All reviews (0)