GEVIN GIORBRAN has authored three books including "Exploring A Many Worlds Universe" in which he describes in detail how our universe eventually ends as space expands perfectly flat and time reaches absolute zero, a prediction based upon his model of an infinite and timeless Multiverse, and all three books were written prior to 1998 when astrophysicists discovered the expansion of the universe is in fact accelerating towards absolute zero. While other scientists continue to grapple with this discovery, in Everything Forever Giorbran eloquently explains for the lay reader the governing role a cosmic zero plays in the evolution of all universes and all life.
In Terry Gilliam's movie Time Bandits, a small band of God's helpers steal a map of the Universe which allows them to travel through special portals that bridge different periods of time. Seeking gold and jewels, the bandits invade periods of history which in the movie are portrayed as different regions of a larger timeless Universe displayed on the map. Turning that story line into non-fiction, in this book we are going to sneak a peak at God's map. We are going to map the timeless realm of all possibilities (sorry, portals not included). And once we cross into this timeless realm, the panoramic view of the big picture unlocks a real magical chest of gold and jewels, in the form of ultimate knowledge about why the universe is so orderly and systematic.
Because scientists are presently realizing the universe is accelerating toward an absolute zero in our future, a completely new way of seeing the universe is emerging. Science tends to study the small, the constructing parts of a system, and so the direction of learning is from the bottom-up. Scientists have managed genuine miracles in discovering the tiny building blocks of the larger world. But rarely do scientists ever attempt to view the whole Universe from a top-down perspective. There has been only one major exception to this rule in the recent past; the physicist David Bohm.
In his younger years David Bohm was a student and friend of Albert Einstein. As a physicist Bohm made major contributions to the development of nuclear physics and quantum theory, but in his later years Bohm encountered a book written by Jiddu Krishnamurti, an eastern philosopher, and was surprised to find there were many ideas about wholeness in this book that related to his own ideas about quantum theory. Bohm later was led to write Wholeness and the Implicate Order, a book in which Bohm claims that there are two kinds of order in nature.
Bohm laid a foundation but never came close to realizing the full extent of his own claim, but he was certainly correct. Unbeknownst to the science of today, there are in fact two distinct and separate types of order in nature, rather than simply order and disorder. One order exists in extreme in our past, which we know as the original state of the big bang. The other kind of order, the balance and symmetry of absolute zero, exists in extreme in our future. Our universe is actually evolving, moving away from the powerful influences of one type of order toward the more powerful other type of order in our future. It turns out that there is a very good reason the expansion of the universe is accelerating. The universe has an objective. It has a goal. The universe is moving toward a whole other kind of order.