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I saw the thread recently where somebody had discussed how it was stated within The Andalite Chronicles that Elfangor said the Ellimist exists past the traditional ten dimensions. That was shot down, and admittedly, we had this debate a few months back, when I was pushing for Ellimist and Crayak revisions, and somebody further agreed they were 1-C or High 1-C. The mods gave good reasons why that should not be done then. But there was something I had not considered then, and how it relates to something we all accept on Q's profile, which... why? If we don't accept it for the Ellimist but do for Q, what am I missing? Or is an upgrade/downgrade needed? I'm not trying to start something, I just want clarification. Here is the excerpt from The Andalite Chronicles:
<Well . . . I don't know. But if Ellimists are real, if they really do live in dimensions beyond our own, then they have powers we could not imagine. Pretend . . . never mind.>
"No, tell me," Loren urged. "Unless you have something else to do."
<Okay, well, you know that space-time has ten dimensions. There are the normal dimensions of up/down, left/right, and forward/back. Then there is the fourth dimension, which is time. Then, there are six other dimensions, but they are curled up into themselves, so we don't see or feel them. All we feel are three space dimensions, plus time.>
I think I kind of see author's intent here, especially since we had raised that argument back then that this should make Ellimist and Crayak 1-C, or High 1-C. They said that since those other "six dimensions" curl into themselves, it should be disregarded. But on Q's profile it states that he is 26th-dimensional, and... I now remember the TNG episode that came from, where they gave a similar statement to what Elfangor said above. And it's almost like that was the inspiration for the scene above and K.A. Applegate and Michael Grant, who wrote the Animorphs books, are very much hardocre science-fiction geeks who, if you've ever read Animorphs in full length, definitely watched Star Trek: The Next Generation. Plus K.A. herself even admits to looking to other source material for inspiration, and mixing them like one makes a meal, with the source material serving as inspiration as the ingredients to the new mishmash. Here is the passage to describe it:
EINSTEIN: G sub I, J of t as t approaches infinity.
BARCLAY: G of t over G naught.
EINSTEIN: So it is, so it is.
BARCLAY: I still don't see how you're going to incorporate quantum principle into general relativity without adjusting the cosmological constant a lot more than you're doing here.
EINSTEIN: If we increase the value as you suggest, we must face the possibility of twenty-six dimensions instead of ten.
BARCLAY: I don't think I could deal with that.
EINSTEIN: I certainly could not.
BARCLAY: But... if the semiset curved into the subatomic, the infinities might cancel each other out.
EINSTEIN: Gruss Gott. They just might.
LAFORGE: We had a meeting at 0700.
BARCLAY: I'm sorry, Commander. Thank you, Professor. End program.
That seems to be pretty much the same math technobabble or whatever, that the 16 other dimensions cancel each other out, like it was stated with the Ellimist and his ten dimensions. I'm not even saying Q should be downgraded, mind, because he has all those other feats. But really, why does this apply to him and not the Ellimist? Are more revisions needed? Or can some mod explain it to me?
<Well . . . I don't know. But if Ellimists are real, if they really do live in dimensions beyond our own, then they have powers we could not imagine. Pretend . . . never mind.>
"No, tell me," Loren urged. "Unless you have something else to do."
<Okay, well, you know that space-time has ten dimensions. There are the normal dimensions of up/down, left/right, and forward/back. Then there is the fourth dimension, which is time. Then, there are six other dimensions, but they are curled up into themselves, so we don't see or feel them. All we feel are three space dimensions, plus time.>
I think I kind of see author's intent here, especially since we had raised that argument back then that this should make Ellimist and Crayak 1-C, or High 1-C. They said that since those other "six dimensions" curl into themselves, it should be disregarded. But on Q's profile it states that he is 26th-dimensional, and... I now remember the TNG episode that came from, where they gave a similar statement to what Elfangor said above. And it's almost like that was the inspiration for the scene above and K.A. Applegate and Michael Grant, who wrote the Animorphs books, are very much hardocre science-fiction geeks who, if you've ever read Animorphs in full length, definitely watched Star Trek: The Next Generation. Plus K.A. herself even admits to looking to other source material for inspiration, and mixing them like one makes a meal, with the source material serving as inspiration as the ingredients to the new mishmash. Here is the passage to describe it:
EINSTEIN: G sub I, J of t as t approaches infinity.
BARCLAY: G of t over G naught.
EINSTEIN: So it is, so it is.
BARCLAY: I still don't see how you're going to incorporate quantum principle into general relativity without adjusting the cosmological constant a lot more than you're doing here.
EINSTEIN: If we increase the value as you suggest, we must face the possibility of twenty-six dimensions instead of ten.
BARCLAY: I don't think I could deal with that.
EINSTEIN: I certainly could not.
BARCLAY: But... if the semiset curved into the subatomic, the infinities might cancel each other out.
EINSTEIN: Gruss Gott. They just might.
LAFORGE: We had a meeting at 0700.
BARCLAY: I'm sorry, Commander. Thank you, Professor. End program.
That seems to be pretty much the same math technobabble or whatever, that the 16 other dimensions cancel each other out, like it was stated with the Ellimist and his ten dimensions. I'm not even saying Q should be downgraded, mind, because he has all those other feats. But really, why does this apply to him and not the Ellimist? Are more revisions needed? Or can some mod explain it to me?