The Birth of Dimensions and the Perception of Fractality

The Birth of Dimensions and the Perception of Fractality

https://zenodo.org/records/19695379 Author: Sergey SkrynnikPublication Date: 2026-04-21Version: 12.0Publication Platform: ZenodoLanguage: Russian (with parallel translations into English and Kazakh) Abstract The work proposes an interdisciplinary hypothesis on the origin of dimensions based on the phenomenon of a “wave over a wave.” The world is interpreted not as a stage, but as a process, with frequency as the primary entity. Time is introduced as a count of repetitions of a cyclic process, while the concept of dimension arises from the need for an unambiguous description of the system’s state: projecting a cycle onto a linear scale leads to a loss of phase information, which requires the introduction of an additional coordinate. The increasing complexity of the process (phase scaling according to the law 2ⁿ) gives rise to quadratic dependencies, which, in perception, manifest as different physical quantities, possibly related by the relation pₙ ∝ p^(2^n), where the exponent equals 2 raised to the power of n. On this basis, a unified sequence is constructed that...
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Reflections: BELIEF, DISBELIEF. SPIRIT and MATTER.

Reflections: BELIEF, DISBELIEF. SPIRIT and MATTER.

(zenodo.org) Download the original in doc format Download English translation doc Author - Sergey Skrynnik Republic of Kazakhstan, Almaty, mailing address is: science@ast-1c.kz 26 June 2024 Revisions as of 05.05.2026: In the final section of the work, a brief but important conclusion was made regarding the proposed model of consciousness. FROM THE AUTHOR: ON THE SCOPE AND LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY This work is the result of an independent interdisciplinary inquiry and represents a philosophical-theoretical attempt to interpret certain fundamental regularities of nature. The author considers it necessary to define the scope and character of the presented approach: 1. Scientific and Philosophical Character The work is based on rational analysis, logical comparisons, and interpretative engagement with existing physical concepts. The arguments presented constitute a conceptual model and do not claim the status of a completed scientific theory. 2. Principle of Hypothetical and Critical Openness The author acknowledges the potential incompleteness and possible fallibility of specific propositions. The work remains open to critical analysis, revision, and refinement. None of the statements should be regarded...
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