by phenomenous1 February 25, 2025
Get the CLOUDalists mug.catalistic (adjective)/ˌkatəˈlistɪk/
Definition: Of or relating to transformative experiences that catalyze profound personal change through intense emotional turbulence or upheaval.
Etymology: Coined blend of “catalytic” (causing change) + “-astic” (having the quality of), suggesting both the chemical process of catalysis and the dynamic, often tumultuous nature of deep transformation.
Usage: Typically describes impressions, experiences, or periods that create lasting change through difficulty or emotional intensity.
Example: “The loss was deeply catalistic, reshaping her understanding of what truly mattered in life.”
Synonyms: transformative, catalytic, metamorphicRelated forms: catasticallly (adverb)
Definition: Of or relating to transformative experiences that catalyze profound personal change through intense emotional turbulence or upheaval.
Etymology: Coined blend of “catalytic” (causing change) + “-astic” (having the quality of), suggesting both the chemical process of catalysis and the dynamic, often tumultuous nature of deep transformation.
Usage: Typically describes impressions, experiences, or periods that create lasting change through difficulty or emotional intensity.
Example: “The loss was deeply catalistic, reshaping her understanding of what truly mattered in life.”
Synonyms: transformative, catalytic, metamorphicRelated forms: catasticallly (adverb)
by DigitalStarlight September 24, 2025
Get the Catalistic mug.Related Words
caudalist
• Caudacity
• Causality
• caucasist
• Caulista
• CLOUDalists
• Cuddlist
• Cuddlistic
• cabalistic
• cainalist
The phenomenon where in people that are geographically separated experience a coincidence with no other possible explanation, that would not have happened otherwise.
You pick up the phone to dial your sister, and she is already on the line without dialing, or the phone ringing, as she has already called you.
But you know that if you did not go to call her, she would not have tried to call you - synchronicit causality
It was the act of picking up the phone that precipitated the event.
But you know that if you did not go to call her, she would not have tried to call you - synchronicit causality
It was the act of picking up the phone that precipitated the event.
by Lostware February 1, 2012
Get the synchronicit causality mug.A hypothetical framework proposing that faster-than-light (FTL) travel does not necessarily imply time travel or causality violation. Contrary to conventional physics (where FTL equals time travel via relativity), Preserved Causality Theory suggests that causality is more fundamental than light speed limits—that there's a deeper structure ensuring causes precede effects regardless of velocity. This could involve privileged reference frames, quantum non-locality extended to macroscopic scales, or novel spacetime geometry that allows FTL without temporal paradoxes. The theory opens the door to interstellar travel while keeping grandma safe from accidental erasure. It's the dream of every sci-fi fan who wants warp drive without the headache of meeting your own grandfather.
"But Einstein said FTL equals time travel!" they protested. "Preserved Causality Theory," the warp drive engineer replied, "suggests Einstein was right about light but wrong about causality being tied to it. We're going to Alpha Centauri in a week, and we'll be back before we left—no, wait, we'll be back after we left. Causality preserved. Probably." The theory remains unproven, but so does faster-than-light travel itself."
by Nammugal March 4, 2026
Get the Preserved Causality Theory mug.A framework proposing that causality is fundamental and conserved—that even in extreme conditions (FTL travel, time dilation, quantum weirdness), cause-effect relationships are preserved. Preserved Causality suggests that causality isn't just a feature of our spacetime but a conserved quantity, like energy or momentum. You can stretch it, bend it, maybe even warp it—but you cannot break it. FTL doesn't mean time travel; it means we don't yet understand how causality is preserved at those speeds.
"They said FTL means time travel—therefore impossible. Preserved Causality Theory says: maybe causality is conserved, like energy. We don't know how FTL preserves it, but that doesn't mean it can't. The theory buys time for engineers: causality isn't fragile; it's fundamental."
by Dumu The Void March 5, 2026
Get the Preserved Causality Theory mug.A variant of Preserved Causality, emphasizing causality as a conserved quantity analogous to energy, momentum, or charge. Conserved Causality suggests that in any physical process, the total causal order—the network of cause-effect relationships—remains invariant. You can transform it, redistribute it, but you cannot create or destroy causal connection. The theory provides a framework for thinking about time travel, quantum entanglement, and FTL without paradox: causality is conserved, so any apparent violation must be balanced elsewhere.
"Entanglement seems to violate causality—instant influence across space. Conserved Causality Theory says: maybe causality is conserved, like energy. The influence goes somewhere, does something, balances out. Not violation, but transformation. Causality isn't broken; it's just moved around."
by Dumu The Void March 5, 2026
Get the Conserved Causality Theory mug.A theoretical hypothesis proposing that faster-than-light (FTL) phenomena, including warp drives and communications outside normal spacetime, preserve causality by appearing to observers within spacetime as if they were traveling at luminal speeds. This hypothesis extends the conserved causality principle to FTL scenarios by suggesting that spacetime functions like a computer plane: spectators (entities outside spacetime) perceive and maintain the causal relationships that observers (entities within spacetime) experience as potentially paradoxical. In practical terms, a warp drive doesn't violate causality because from the perspective of any observer within spacetime, its effects propagate exactly as if constrained by light speed—even though "outside," something else is happening. This elegantly resolves FTL paradoxes (like the tachyonic antitelephone) by proposing that causality is preserved not within spacetime but by the larger dimensional context in which spacetime is embedded.
The hypothesis has profound implications: it suggests that paraphysics and parasciences may be valid fields studying phenomena that interact with spacetime from outside—exactly the kinds of things that seem impossible within spacetime but might be perfectly coherent from a higher-dimensional perspective. It also explains why we can't perceive dimensions beyond 3D-4D: our observer-status within spacetime means we only experience the "projected" version of reality that preserves causal consistency. The extra dimensions are real; we just can't see them from inside the computer plane.
Example: "The warp drive test seemed to show the ship arriving before it left—a clear causality violation. But the Extended Causality Hypothesis suggests that from outside spacetime, the sequence was perfectly preserved; we just couldn't see the higher-dimensional context that made it consistent. The paradox wasn't real; it was just the limit of our observer-perspective."
Example: "The warp drive test seemed to show the ship arriving before it left—a clear causality violation. But the Extended Causality Hypothesis suggests that from outside spacetime, the sequence was perfectly preserved; we just couldn't see the higher-dimensional context that made it consistent. The paradox wasn't real; it was just the limit of our observer-perspective."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
Get the Extended Causality Hypothesis mug.