Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Beforemath

Beforemath: noun. Beforemath is the opposite of aftermath - the word describes the consequences of an occurrence that hasn't happened yet. Although one may think that beforemath would be quite difficult to encounter, it may in fact be ubiquitous. Recent discoveries in the field of physics have proved that there are certain particles that move faster than light. The sometimes accepted conclusion from that, based on Einstein's assumptions, would be that these particles are moving against the flow of time and as such, their movement through the fourth dimension is beforemath, as the thing that caused them to do so is still hanging in the future somewhere. The fact that this phenomenon can be observed appears to disprove the assumption that anything faster than light goes back in time, but theoretical physicists - detached from the real world as they are - seem to take no notice.

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