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Definitions by AbzuInExile

Long-Duration Motion Machines

Long-Duration Motion Machines are hypothetical devices designed to operate for extremely long periods without external energy input, while still respecting known conservation laws and thermodynamics. Unlike perpetual motion machines, they do not claim infinite operation or energy creation. Instead, they rely on ultra-slow energy dissipation, delayed equilibration, environmental energy harvesting, or probabilistic and extraphysical mechanisms. The key distinction is that long-duration machines eventually stop, while perpetual motion machines violate physical laws by claiming endless motion or energy output. These machines are often discussed in theoretical engineering, speculative physics, and borderline scientific proposals.
Long-Duration Motion Machines — Example

A hypothetical machine uses ultra-low-friction components, cosmic background radiation harvesting, and delayed thermal equilibration to keep moving for millions of years. It never produces excess energy and slowly loses motion over astronomical timescales. Unlike a perpetual motion machine, it obeys thermodynamics but exploits environmental and probabilistic factors to extend operation far beyond conventional machines.

Probabilistic Mechanics

Probabilistic Mechanics is a speculative framework proposing that probability itself functions as a fundamental dimension of reality, commonly identified as the fifth dimension. In this view, physical systems evolve not only through space and time but also through probability space, where all possible outcomes coexist as real structures rather than abstract statistics. Instead of probability being a mathematical tool for uncertainty, it becomes a mechanical property governing how realities branch, collapse, or coexist. Probabilistic Mechanics is often used to reinterpret quantum mechanics, multiverse theories, and decision-based universe branching as deterministic processes operating within a higher-dimensional probability field.
Probabilistic Mechanics — Example

A quantum particle approaches a barrier with two possible paths. Instead of randomly choosing one, both outcomes exist as real trajectories within the probability dimension. In this framework, the particle’s behavior is determined by its motion through probability space (5D), and observers only experience the path their universe intersects. The mechanics of probability govern which outcomes stabilize into experienced reality.

Extraphysical Thermodynamics Problem

The Extraphysical Thermodynamics Problem examines whether thermodynamic principles—especially entropy, irreversibility, and equilibrium—apply beyond conventional physical reality. If higher dimensions, probability universes, or extraphysical realms exist, it is unclear whether entropy increases there, resets, transfers between universes, or behaves in non-classical ways. This problem challenges the assumption that the arrow of time and heat death are universal features of all realities. It raises questions about whether extraphysical domains allow entropy leakage, entropy inversion, or entropy-free states, potentially enabling phenomena that appear impossible under standard thermodynamics within a single universe.
Extraphysical Thermodynamics Problem — Example

Suppose one universe reaches heat death while another nearby universe (with similar physical laws) appears to reset into a low-entropy state. If entropy can be transferred or diluted across universes, then the second law of thermodynamics may only apply locally. This raises the question of whether entropy “leaks” into extraphysical realms or if some universes act as entropy sinks for others.

Extraphysical Conservation Problem

The Extraphysical Conservation Problem refers to the theoretical difficulty of extending classical conservation laws (energy, momentum, information, etc.) beyond the physical universe into hypothetical extraphysical domains such as multiverses, higher dimensions, probability spaces, or non-material realms. While physics assumes conservation holds within a closed system, this problem questions what happens when the “system” includes parallel universes, branching timelines, or non-physical layers of reality. It asks whether conservation laws still apply globally, whether they are redistributed across realities, or whether conservation itself breaks down outside spacetime. The problem is central to speculative cosmology, multiverse theory, and extraphysical metaphysics.
Extraphysical Conservation Problem — Example

Imagine a multiverse experiment where energy appears to vanish from our universe during a quantum event. Later, another universe shows an unexplained energy surge at the exact same probabilistic moment. Locally, conservation seems violated in both universes, but globally—across the multiverse—the total energy may remain conserved. The problem is that observers inside only one universe cannot verify whether conservation holds extraphysically or is merely broken beyond their measurement horizon.

Hypothesis of the 11 Dimensions of Reality

The Hypothesis of the 11 Dimensions of Reality are a speculative, semi-cosmic framework that expands reality beyond the usual 3D + time setup and goes full multiverse mode. It starts grounded (length, width, depth, time) and then progressively spirals into probability, branching universes, meta-universes, and finally… absolute nothingness. Often used in sci-fi debates, metaphysical arguments, and by people who say “hear me out” before explaining existence itself.

Breakdown:
1–3. Length, Width, Depth – Regular space. You can bump into stuff here.
4. Time – The “you can’t go back but you wish you could” dimension.
5. Probability – Every “what could’ve happened” timeline.
6. Branching Universes – Same starting point, different choices, infinite regrets.
7. Different Start Universes – Same game, totally different character creation.
8. Universe Plane – The multiverse’s group chat.
9. Universe Hopping – Skipping realities without going step-by-step.
10. Infinite Possibilities – Literally everything that can exist, does.
11. Void of Possibilities – Beyond existence, beyond potential, beyond “bro.”
“Bro, in Dimension 6 of the Hypothesis of the 11 Dimensions of Reality there’s a universe where I passed that exam.”
“Yeah, but in Dimension 11 none of this even exists.”

Polypanentheism

Polypanentheism is a philosophical-religious doctrine that combines elements of pantheism, panentheism, and polytheism. Each of these schools of thought addresses the relationship between deities and the universe in a distinct way, and polypanentheism attempts to integrate them into a single concept.

**Polytheism**: Refers to the belief in multiple gods, each with different roles and powers. In polypanentheism, there is a multiplicity of gods, but they are not independent or entirely separate from the universe.

**Pantheism**: The central idea of pantheism is that the universe and God are equivalent. Everything that exists is part of God. In polypanentheism, this view is reflected in the idea that gods are present throughout creation, but not limited to it alone.

**Panentheism**: In panentheism, God is immanent in the universe, but also transcends it, existing beyond it. Polypanentheism inherits this perspective by proposing that the gods are in all of creation (immanence), but possess a dimension that transcends them (transcendence).

In polypanentheism, the universe is considered sacred, but it does not exhaust the divine. The gods are multiple and are in all things, but also exist beyond them. In other words, polypanentheism suggests that each deity is present in every part of the cosmos, without losing its individuality or its transcendent aspect.
Polypanentheism is a belief system that combines elements of polytheism and panentheism. Imagine the divine as a multifaceted gemstone. In polytheism, each facet of the gemstone represents a different god or goddess, each with their own unique attributes and stories. Followers of this path honor these deities as individual entities.

Now, add to that the concept of panentheism, which is as if the gemstone itself were filled with light. This light represents the divine essence present throughout the gem, imbuing each facet with its brilliance. In this way, the light shines through all the gods and goddesses, connecting them to a greater divine presence that permeates the universe and extends beyond it.

Thus, in polypanentheism, while you recognize and worship the individual deities (the facets), you also understand that they are all connected and are manifestations of the single all-encompassing divine source (the light within the gemstone). This allows for a rich spiritual tapestry where both the diversity of the gods and the unity of the divine are honored and celebrated.
Polypanentheism by AbzuInExile January 24, 2026
A Voidborne is a person within the Voidpunk subculture who deliberately reclaims language, aesthetics, and concepts of dehumanization by centering them as sources of identity, power, and creative practice. Voidborne people often describe themselves as aligned, fused, or one-with the Void — an aesthetic/metaphysical space of absence, negation, silence, and unmaking — and may use the term “void” as a lens for politics, art, and self-understanding.
Reclamation of dehumanization: Where outsiders might use metaphors of emptiness, lack, or “otherness” as insults, Voidborne people adopt those metaphors intentionally to critique stigma, resist normative humanist expectations, and reframe vulnerability or alienation as meaningful stance.

Void Dysphoria (identity experience): Many Voidborne report a persistent sense of affinity with the Void — not always distressing in itself, but sometimes experienced as dysphoria when forced into human-centered norms or when language fails to capture their interiority. This is an identity experience rather than a clinical diagnosis; responses vary widely across individuals.

Aesthetic & practice: Visuals and practices skew toward negative space, monochrome or high-contrast palettes, erasure/collage, glitch/noise textures, ritualized silence, and minimal or anti-heroic performance. Music, poetry, and fashion often emphasize absence, decay, or the uncanny.

Politics & ethics: Voidpunk tends to critique productivity, anthropocentrism, and coercive social narratives. Many Voidborne practice mutual aid, consent-focused community-building, and anti-ableist approaches—while also interrogating how mainstream activism co-opts emptiness as spectacle.
Voidborne by AbzuInExile January 24, 2026