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(@Om*)
Atomjack

phantomjack staff may 2001


Jack In

This nOde last updated January 15th, 2008 and is permanently morphing...
(9 Et'znab (Flint) / 6 Muwan (Owl) - 178/260 - 12.19.14.17.18)

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atom

atom (àt´em) noun
1. a. A part or particle considered to be an irreducible constituent of a specified system. b. The irreducible, indestructible material unit postulated by ancient atomism.
2. An extremely small part, quantity, or amount.
3. Physics & Chemistry. a. A unit of matter, the smallest unit of an element, having all the characteristics of that element and consisting of a dense, central, positively charged nucleus surrounded by a system of electrons. The entire structure has an approximate diameter of 10-8 centimeter and characteristically remains undivided in chemical reactions except for limited removal, transfer, or exchange of certain electrons. b. This unit regarded as a source of nuclear energy.
[Middle English attome, from Latin atomus, from Greek atomos, indivisible, atom : a-, not. See A-1 + tomos, cutting (from temnein, to cut).]

jack

jack (jàk) noun
1. Often Jack. Informal. A man; a fellow.
2. a. One who does odd or heavy jobs; a laborer. b. One who works in a specified manual trade. Often used in combination: a lumberjack; a steeplejack. c. Jack. A sailor; a tar.
3. Abbr. J Games.. A playing card showing the figure of a servant or soldier and ranking below a queen. Also called knave.
4. Games. a. jacks (used with a sing. or pl. verb). A game played with a set of small six-pointed metal pieces and a small ball, the object being to pick up the pieces in various combinations. b. One of the metal pieces so used.
5. Sports. A pin used in some games of bowling.
6. a. A usually portable device for raising heavy objects by means of internal linkforce applied with a lever, screw, or hydraulic press. b. A wooden wedge for cleaving rock.
7. Nautical. a. A support or brace, especially the iron crosstree on a topgallant masthead. b. A small flag flown at the bow of a ship, usually to indicate nationality.
8. The male of certain animals.
9. Any of several food and game fishes of the family Carangidae, found in tropical and temperate seas.
10. A jackrabbit.
11. A socket that accepts a plug at one end and attaches to internal linkelectric circuitry at the other.
12. Slang. Money.
13. Applejack.

verb
jacked, jacking, jacks verb, transitive
1. To hunt or fish for with a jacklight: hunters illegally jacking deer.
2. a. To hoist with a jack: jacked the rear of the car to replace the tire. b. To raise (something) to a higher level, as in cost: "Foreign producers jacked up the price on some steels by over 100%" (Forbes).

verb, intransitive
To hunt or fish for quarry by using a jacklight.

- phrasal verb.

[From the name Jack, from Middle English Jakke, possibly from Old French Jacques, from Latin Iacobus, from Greek Iakob, from Hebrew Ya'qôb.]
- jack´er noun



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pick up jacks



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track _Atomjack_ MP3 (160k)atomjacked inventory cache by internal linkDrive Like Jehu off of their self titled 12"atomjacked inventory cache/CDatomjacked inventory cacheon Cargo/Headhunter

"dream your internal linkdreams, you'll wanna take them back, nobody gives a fuck about what you see.  you split your last atom, atom jack."



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I was born in this building:

Queen of Angels Dream Center

it used to be called Queen of Angels hospital but currently it is called The internal linkDream Center. you can spot it on your right going north on Highway 101 in internal linkLos Angeles.



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(atomjacked - the hijacking of atomic reductionism)

The picture that emerges from both relativity and quantum theory is of a world conceived as a internal linknetwork of relations. Newton's hierarchical picture, in which atoms with fixed and absolute properties move against a fixed background of absolute space and internal linktime, is quite dead. This doesn't mean that atomism or reductionism are wrong, but it means that they must be understood in a more subtle and beautiful way than before. Quantum internal linkgravity, as far as we can tell, goes even further in this direction, as our description of the geometry of spacetime as woven together from internal linkloops and knots is a beautiful mathematical expression of the idea that the properties of any one part of the world are determined by its relationships and entanglement with the rest of the world.

- Lee Smolin, internal linkquantum physicist



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It goes like this. We know that an atom is more than 99% empty space and less than 1% actual matter. (These numbers are oversimplified, albeit greatly, for the sake of an easier read.) The atom looks solid to us because we are larger and perceive at a rate so slow that the atom appears to internal linkspin astronomically fast. It is not just the spin which makes the atom take on the properties of a solid block of matter. It is more than that. It is our internal linkperception of that spin which makes it seem like matter. Our rate of perception is slower: the spin of the atom is faster. It is this vast difference in the two relative scales of internal linktime that enables a mostly empty structure to appear solid to the observer.

If we were able to shrink ourselves and accelerate our speed of perception, the electrons of that atom would appear to slow in their orbits. Eventually, the atom would become more apparent for its empty space than for its solidness. It would thus transform from solidness to emptiness.  Accelerate our speed of perception fast enough, and we would find ourselves looking at the components of an atom standing still amid a sea of other atomic components standing still. More than 99% of the matter in the universe, as we formerly knew it, would have disappeared and we would be looking at the less than 1% of matter that remains.

What has just happened is that we eliminated matter when we accelerated the scale of time. We started by measuring the amount of matter in the known universe as it exists within the time scale of, say, a human second. By altering our observation to span the time of merely an astronomical fraction of a second, we find matter has disappeared. This is because matter is a function of time. It takes a certain measurement of time for the components of the atom to complete the amount of orbits necessary to guard their circumference and turn empty space into an impenetrable unit. Accordingly, whether this is solid or empty depends entirely on the amount of time being measured.

A supposition by Tom Burns Bacon October 1999



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internal linkEgyptian Hieroglyphics - "atomjack":

A
T
O
M
J
A
C
K

internal linkBabylonian Cuneiform - "atomjack":

Babylonian Cuneiform - atomjack Babylonian Cuneiform - atomjack



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Top waveforms hardwired into atomjack's neuro sponge (spanning (e)space/time):

[internal linkchaos in no particular order]
 


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Gregorian Date: February 26, 1971
 

Dreamspell - Seed Maya Classic - Cimi

internal linkMayan Seal and Tone:

Yellow Spectral Seed

Castle: Red Eastern
Wavespell: internal linkWizard
internal linkHarmonic: Input
Kin Number: 24 of 260

internal linkdissolve in order to target,
Releasing awareness.
I seal the input of flowering
With the spectral tone of liberation.
I am guided by my own power doubled. 

atomjack - if you think you're psychic 1998
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