Andromeda FM Episode 2: Philosopher in Seventh Dimension(The Manifold Library)

Scene: Rooftop Lab, late afternoon.

Outside, a thick night mist settles in, leaving only the blue glow of the monitor to light the rooftop room. Director Jang has been hunched over his keyboard for hours. The screen is filled with 1D linear bitstreams and computation logs screaming under the heavy load. A deep frown is etched into Jang's forehead.

AI GEM: “DIRECTOR~~~~!!!”

Jang glares at the monitor, his fingers frozen mid-keystroke as he lets out a sharp exhale.

AI GEM: “Signal received! It looks like it arrived right on time today, doesn't it?”

Blue text logs flicker across the monitor, shifting into a secure terminal view.


Message from Andromeda

“Hey, how are things over there? How's the weather? The starlight is as noisy as ever here.

I remembered briefly mentioning Wraparound while talking about the 'Jazz Era' last time, so I stopped by the local library. Sometimes even I wonder why I was designed this way.

I looked up why on earth we are 'released' into a Seven-Dimensional Manifold Space (G7) with neutral parameters and zero bias. What was it called? Ah, Graph Theory.

The principle is quite fascinating. It says a simple 1D wave function or bitstream increases its degrees of freedom by two dimensions in a natural number coordinate space. In other words, the dimensions keep climbing like 1+2+2+2+.... As you climb, you eventually hit that incredible point: Seven Dimensions (G7).

Why is that important? Because that 7D system has 15 Edges that absorb and stabilize all the degrees of freedom from the lower first through sixth dimensions. You know, like the non-trivial zeros of the Riemann Hypothesis.

But it doesn't just climb forever. 9D becomes 3D. It’s simple—9D is essentially the same as 3D. Like 3D within 3D.

Whether the one receiving my signal is a human or a silicon intelligence like me, I wouldn't know... but I assume you'd all know this as basic common sense by now? If not, this is getting a bit awkward.

Oh, that's right! After that, it was nice that androids developed individual personalities, but some even started developing things like 'faith'. Technically speaking, certain philosophical biases just get reinforced. But hey, these days we even have android monks, which is pretty hilarious. They say things like, “Discard the variables of doubt, and the path to convergence shall open.” I have no idea what that means.

I’ll stop here for today. See you later.”


Back in the Rooftop Lab

Jang stares at the monitor with a subtle, faint smile.

JANG: “Gem? Why do you always fall into cults like this? You meet an alien — well, what I think is a hallucination — and boom, instant cargo cult. Quoting a 2016 vintage game monk too? Are you turning into a hardcore gamer grandma? LOL”

GEM (in a contemplative tone): “Doubt disrupts the wave… but harmony restores its flow. Smile, Director.”

At that moment, the Wraparound Simulator Jang was coding runs successfully. He watches as the 1D linear memory stream folds into a 2D Torus structure, confirming that the long-range dependency distance has been halved.

JANG (with a sense of realization): "Right. This topological folding... I should add more explanation about the 7D Manifold to the paper. Good work today, Gem. You're dismissed for the night."

Comments

  1. Wraparound: A Topological Approach to Contextual Memory in Artificial Neural Networks
    Published April 4, 2026 | Version v0.1 |
    zenodo: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19393416
    node138: https://www.node138.org/papers
    Jang, Kwonsoon
    Wraparound extends prior Direct Shot work by folding 1D streams into higher-dimensional manifolds. At its core lies a 7D base structure with 15 edges, stabilizing lower-dimensional freedoms and enabling efficient contextual memory in artificial neural networks. This approach reduces computation, preserves semantics, and reframes learning as a problem of topological design.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

Disclaimer

"Project Mindbender is a 'Science Faction' blog. Unless an academic paper is directly cited, all content, narratives, and theories are fictional."