[Redbook5:313][19880818:1145n]{Spherical
Orientation [continued
(14)]}[18th
August 1988]
19880818.1145
[continued]
The
Sphere* has no absolute distances: all distances are relative. Only
Degrees are absolute, because the Circle shape (and thus the shape
of the Sphere) is absolute. (In practice, neither the Circle nor the
Sphere is necessarily regular: I don’t know how the inequalities of
forces should be expressed.)
{(Aberration)}
**It
will be appreciated that the geography of the Sphere is an Inner
geography in a mental as well as a topological sense: it bears no
relation, so far as I know, to the geography of Space or even
Space-Time within the Physical Universe, despite the fact that it
represents the Inner World of that Physical Universe.
*[ie
this Sphere; see previous entries, eg
[Redbook5:306–320][19880818:1145]{Spherical
Orientation}[18th August 1988]ff; &
[Redbook5:218-239][19880722:2307]{The
Sphere}[22nd July 1988]ff.]
*{From
here to [[Redbook5:319][19880818:1810h]{Spherical
Orientation [continued (25)]}[18th August 1988]]
p319 is basically an aberration, a mistake}
[See
[Redbook5:319-320][19880818:1810i]{Spherical Orientation [continued
(26)]: Correction}[18th August 1988]]
[continues]
[PostedBlogger16022019]
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