The theory of unification

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exposed the world to the dazzling properties of higher-dimensional space. Einstein found Riemann’s celebrated 1854 lecture to be the key to the problem. He found that he could incorporate the entire body of Riemann’s work in the reformulation of his principle. Almost line for line, the great work of Riemann found its true home in Einstein’s principle. This was Einstein’s proudest piece of work, even more than his celebrated equation E = mc2. The physical reinterpretation of Riemann’s famous 1854 lecture is now called general relativity, and Einstein’s field equations rank among the most profound ideas in scientific history. Riemann’s great contribution, we recall, was that he introduced the concept of the metric tensor, a field that is defined at all points in space. The metric tensor is not a single number. At each point in space, it consists of a collection of ten numbers. The core of Riemann’s work was the realization that physical laws simplify in higher dimensional space. The theory may unlock the secret of the origin of the universe. Introducing higher dimensions may be essential for prying loose the secrets of Creation. According to this theory, before the Big Bang, our cosmos was actually a perfect ten-dimensional universe, ( I am not saying, nor is it a speculation, it is based on hard scientific fact) a world where interdimensional travel was possible. However, this ten-dimensional world was unstable, and eventually it “cracked” in two, creating two separate universes: a four-and a sixdimensional universe. ( our Deen has the answer, as to what transpired


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