No.14056875 ViewReplyOriginalReport
At the dawn of the universe, matter was so condensed that the expansion of mass created tiny black holes. Smaller than atoms, and far more numerous, the singularities of these "theoretical" black holes are entangled with one another, creating huge, expansive "webs" or strings interconnecting one another through space and time. Unaffected by gravity and the weak and strong nuclear forces, they exist in two dimensions of space and act like a string tied in a circle. So, what influences them to move and vibrate and have frequency, if not gravity or particle physics?

It's actually rather simple. Time, at least our conception of it, isn't a real thing. Everybody on this board knows that; with no conscious observer, there is no "time". Photons don't experience "time", however, our tiny black holes do - it is the only thing they experience. Their state is dependent on their point in time.

In the far future, humanity will harness these to create negative mass.