6 Worlds ExperimentRecords are coded to aid comprehension. The code includes what species is the individual recorded, which planet they are on and the time into the experiment (expressed in nitu – for comparisons between planets – and in years and days on the planet – for comparison within planet or individual).
Note - since the experiment started at different on-world times the number of nitu for each entry is simply the number of nitu passed on that planet at the end of the day-cycle according to our observations. Further, if a subject does not sleep when the day-cycle would tick over for the experiment, the chapter is not given the new date even though it spans two days of observations. This is to promote clarity of experience to the reader.
| Species | Planet | Time elapsed since beginning of experiment | ||
| nitu | On planet | |||
| Year | Day | |||
| Example: | ||||
| Ca Dog |
D World |
40 40 nitu |
1 Year 1 |
2 Day 2 |
| …relates to a Canis sapiens individual on the Dog home-planet, 40 nitu
into the experiment. This was on the second day on-World of the experiment during
its first year. The record is coded as CaD40.1.2 |
||||
| Species | Planet | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canis sapiens | Ca | Dog | World | D |
| Cephlapod sapiens | Ce | Octopus | Ocean | O |
| Corvus sapiens | Co | Corvid | Various | C |
| Homo sapiens | Ho | Human | Earth | H |
| Tortugo sapiens | To | Tortoise | One-Of-Many | T |
| Hymnoptera sapiens | Hy | Bee (sic.) | Here | B |
Translation of records is available for all species. Special care has been taken to translate the essence of meaning based on sensory experience of the species recorded and reading. Translation notes are included every time deemed relevant (first use per record) so will be repeated.
For context of the reader, possibly not yet familiar with these species, creation myths/bases for faiths are included for each species as a snap-shot insight into the species.
Because of different methods of speech within and between species the following conventions (drawing from human traditions) have been used for clarity to the human reader: