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Have you ever grappled with a philosophy of life? Wondered where you stand on existential questions such as how did we get here? Has religion or science - or even both - even come close to explaining everything there is?
If so, then The Philosophy of the Universe and the Dimensions of the Multiverse by Aaron Joseph Olivier is  a book for you. Olivier attempts to answer  these questions incorporating a kind of 5D (where D is dimensions) model. The three dimensions we all know about the physical world are height, width and depth. Time is the fourth. Time, you say? Yes. Throw a Rubik's cube across the floor. You can see its height, width and depth and also its travel. You don't see the time it took to travel across the floor but you do see the distance it travelled, which gives you an indicator of time.  It all gets a bit complicated after that but the basic idea is that the fifth dimension attempts to connect the fundamental forces of electromagnetism and gravity so that we can fully understand how the universe works. We won't be able to see that either, just as we can't see time but know it exists. The Large Hadron Collider experiment is investigating this fifth dimension.
Olivier's book attempts to tie human spirituality with 5D ideas to create a ''unified theory of everything''. It takes five parts:
''In Methodology 1, I will present my research into religious material to discover the nature of God.''<br>
''In Methodology 2, I will present my field research investigation into the nature of God.''<br> ''In Methodology 3, I will present my research into geometric principles of the universe.''<br> ''In Methodology 4, I will give a scientific analysis of the philosophy of the 5D theory.''<br> 
''In Methodology 5, I will give a theory of the mathematical applications of the 5D theory.''<br>

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