❓ QUESTION:
Lee, tell me, there is much discussion about the nature of Space lately. Personally, when I hear the word "space," I visualize something with a specific shape—defined by length and width, such as a room. However, some argue that it is not a physical place but something abstract. So, what exactly is space? (How would you explain it, and what would be the geographical perspective on this?)
❗️ LEE’S ANSWER:
Geography cannot account for space. Just as the virtual space in a computer game is entirely independent of your room's actual square footage.
The logic of space is similar to that of a dream. A dream essentially fits inside your head, yet within it, you can wander as far as you wish.
Space is an informational construct that transcends our conventional understanding of distance. In a very rough approximation, it is a "volume of events" that generates the dimensions of length, width, and height. Furthermore, the factor of time is an additional unit that does not expand space but rather drives the dynamics of all physical laws.
What I have described aligns with quantum physics, where distance has no impact whatsoever on the entanglement between particles. In that field, the core focus is the dynamics of probability distribution for particle locations, rather than fixed points in space. This directly suggests that objects are not situated where you perceive them to be; rather, they are located wherever you align with them in frequency.
In other words, we inhabit a world of wave vibrations, which our senses interpret as something resembling an "empty box for objects." This is purely an interpretation and does not reflect the actual state of affairs.




