and a Finite Model
Notes by Steven H. Cullinane
May 28, 2007
Part I: A Model of Space-Time
The following paper includes a figure illustrating
Penrose's model of "complexified, compactified Minkowski space-time as the Klein quadric in complex projective 5-space."
Click on picture to enlarge.
For some background on the Klein quadric and space-time, see Roger Penrose, "
On the Origins of Twistor Theory," from
Gravitation and Geometry:
A Volume in Honor of Ivor Robinson, Bibliopolis, 1987.
Part II: A Corresponding Finite Model
The Klein quadric also occurs in a finite model of projective 5-space. See a 1910 paper:
G. M. Conwell, The 3-space PG(3,2) and its group, Ann. of Math. 11, 60-76.
Conwell discusses the quadric, and the related Klein correspondence, in detail. This is noted in a more recent paper by Philippe Cara:
As Cara goes on to explain, the Klein correspondence underlies Conwell's discussion of eight
heptads. These play an important role in another correspondence, illustrated in the
Miracle Octad Generator of R. T. Curtis, that may be used to picture actions of the large Mathieu group M
24.
Related material:
The projective space
PG(5,2), home of the Klein quadric
in the finite model, may be viewed as the set of 64 points of the affine space
AG(6,2), minus the origin.
The 64 points of this affine space may in turn be viewed as the 64 hexagrams of the Classic of Transformation, China's I Ching.
There is a natural correspondence between the 64 hexagrams and the 64 subcubes of a 4x4x4 cube. This correspondence leads to a natural way to generate the affine group AGL(6,2). This may in turn be viewed as a group of over a trillion natural transformations of the 64 hexagrams.
"Once Knecht confessed to his teacher that he wished to learn enough to be able to incorporate the system of the I Ching into the Glass Bead Game. Elder Brother laughed. 'Go ahead and try,' he exclaimed. 'You'll see how it turns out. Anyone can create a pretty little bamboo garden in the world. But I doubt that the gardener would succeed in incorporating the world in his bamboo grove.'"
translated by Richard and Clara Winston
SuSu
Thanks for this.
Are you familar with Terence McKenna’s work with I Ching?
m759&nextdate=532006+235959.999" target="_blank
No, and I don’t want to be. I checked out McKenna and found this site on the aging druggie. I didn’t like the hippie scene in the sixties and I don’t like it now. Booze was always my drug of choice. Still, checking further, I found that McKenna’s afterword to Dick’s In Pursuit of Valis was well written.
Related material:
Ontology Alignment,
Three Souls,
Second Billing,
and Logos.