More than a bit of controversy surrounds the origin of the term Think Space — or TS, as many cultures call it.
Some suggest it came from the original Brain Gang. Others point to Lin Wein, the cosmological philosopher who also drove the movement of social consciousness toward isolationism by presenting the arguments against space exploration that can be summed up in his famous quote: “We are spending thirty percent of our resources to go places where nothing exists.”
Regardless, Think Space is a split world that occurs within the mind of each entity involved and is, in fact, a network of all individual networks where humans, machines, and artificial constructs each serve as unique nodes.
It is the fundamental center of human interaction.
As with most applications of communication theory, it works in three phases: identification, wherein one opens a conversation; contribution, wherein one contributes to that conversation in some meaningful fashion; and confirmation, wherein one receives the result of that input.
The physical manifestation of TS in human systems is the result of DNA channeling, an encoding process that begins before birth and embeds receivers into each person at the genetic level — creating sensitivity to fluctuations in quantum entanglements, the fractal nature of which allows a node to tune to any channel in free-space, or to develop their own channels over which they can then connect directly to any other node.
Sharing in this environment can be as complete, or as fragmented, as each participant desires.