Page 401
Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2025 6:30 pm
Volume 5
A first-person novel
Brief analysis
The fifth volume begins with me completing work on the fourth volume, and there is a sudden transition from the fourth to the fifth volume. I conclude the fourth volume by realizing who the Spirit of Justice is, that it can even appear and does appear as an icosahedron, as one of the geometric figures. But then I start to delve deeper, realizing that in the matrix I deciphered in the first volume, deciphered in the second volume, and in general, thanks to this matrix, which I have physically assembled and continue to assemble, it is through this that I possess all this information. And I want to understand what details are still missing in the matrix that I am constructing. It turns out that almost all geometric figures are present. In the fourth volume, I specifically create the icosahedron as the Spirit of Justice, and it turns out that there is something even higher, more important, and greater. And it is connected to everything — the geometric figure dodecahedron. And when I talk to the Mystic-Old-Man, he tells me that the dodecahedron is death, that there is something even higher, above everything, and that it is the library of knowledge, the Spirit of Death. I begin to understand that this is a separate topic, that it is an entire volume of its own, and I conclude my fourth volume with the realization of three worlds, one of which is the underworld — three visible worlds where people live. And that there is some otherworldly fourth world, like a fourth dimension, which is what comes after death, and what death itself truly is. From there, everything unfolds in an even more intriguing way, and the system — or, one could say, the Spirit, or the system — reveals to me what actually happens to a person when they die. And that when they die, this system... That is, again, you see, if it weren’t for the third volume of “Alternative History,” I wouldn’t be able to tell you everything I am telling now, nor would I be able to explore in such depth in the fourth volume the mythology of the three worlds: sky, earth, and underground. And without the third volume, I wouldn’t have been able to reveal what I uncover in the fifth volume. How could I explain to humanity what death is if I hadn’t addressed in the third volume the most fundamental idea — that all of this is a multiverse, a simulation? And only by realizing and remembering that everything is
A first-person novel
Brief analysis
The fifth volume begins with me completing work on the fourth volume, and there is a sudden transition from the fourth to the fifth volume. I conclude the fourth volume by realizing who the Spirit of Justice is, that it can even appear and does appear as an icosahedron, as one of the geometric figures. But then I start to delve deeper, realizing that in the matrix I deciphered in the first volume, deciphered in the second volume, and in general, thanks to this matrix, which I have physically assembled and continue to assemble, it is through this that I possess all this information. And I want to understand what details are still missing in the matrix that I am constructing. It turns out that almost all geometric figures are present. In the fourth volume, I specifically create the icosahedron as the Spirit of Justice, and it turns out that there is something even higher, more important, and greater. And it is connected to everything — the geometric figure dodecahedron. And when I talk to the Mystic-Old-Man, he tells me that the dodecahedron is death, that there is something even higher, above everything, and that it is the library of knowledge, the Spirit of Death. I begin to understand that this is a separate topic, that it is an entire volume of its own, and I conclude my fourth volume with the realization of three worlds, one of which is the underworld — three visible worlds where people live. And that there is some otherworldly fourth world, like a fourth dimension, which is what comes after death, and what death itself truly is. From there, everything unfolds in an even more intriguing way, and the system — or, one could say, the Spirit, or the system — reveals to me what actually happens to a person when they die. And that when they die, this system... That is, again, you see, if it weren’t for the third volume of “Alternative History,” I wouldn’t be able to tell you everything I am telling now, nor would I be able to explore in such depth in the fourth volume the mythology of the three worlds: sky, earth, and underground. And without the third volume, I wouldn’t have been able to reveal what I uncover in the fifth volume. How could I explain to humanity what death is if I hadn’t addressed in the third volume the most fundamental idea — that all of this is a multiverse, a simulation? And only by realizing and remembering that everything is