Dear Koorosh,

Excellent essay, deep analysis in the spirit of the Cartesian radical doubt. But, in my opinion, still need a deeper ontology and dialectics of continuity and discontinuity, to "grab" (understand) the primordial structure of Universum, a single for physicists, mathematicians and poets. Today, all knowledge requires ontological justification: need a unified ontological framework, carcass and foundation. In fundamental physics is necessary to introduce an ontological standard justification along with the empirical standard.

Kind regards,

Vladimir

    Dear Colin,

    Thank you for your comments, indeed more people like us start thinking that physics can't provide all the answers that today comprising the core of human knowledge and science with fundamental nature. Therefore there is a need for new thinking that brings supplements to physics and also biology for a broader picture.

    Kind regards

    Koorosh

    Dear Vladimir,

    Thank you indeed for your comments. I agree to your view, that we need to have a deeper understanding, but one thing is for sure, and I been highlighting that earlier, namely a new thinking which would be shorn of actually that sort of metaphysics that might hypotheses a certain accept as true. It is to say something that is not detectable to us get only an interpretation out of countless others, but the framework itself without interpretation will give us a broader view.

    One thing that can be inferred from contemporary physics is singularities and discontinuities in many fields and likewise for natural science when it comes to queries like life and consciousness and the intersection of all those that comprise our world. We need to address all these consecutively for having a better picture of our world.

    Warm regards

    Koorosh

    Great collection of thoughts still the important adjacent aspects feels restoring.

    Sincerely,

    Miss. Sujatha Jagannathan

    11 days later

    Dear Sir,

    Discontinuousness is generally attributed to objects under observation. However, as you have rightly pointed out, our measuring instruments and processes are capable of measurement only in phases. Thus, the discontinuities are due to us and not due to the object of measurement. Since whole is not only the sum of its parts (water is more than hydrogen and oxygen), combining the results of measurements by omitting the unquantifiable, leaves gaps in our knowledge of the object or event. This introduces uncertainty. As you say: "there is a totality comprising of all disconnected or separated universes (or equivalently domains), in which we only can comprehend some chunks while by our nature we glue the disconnected parts together that constitutes an integrality to us".

    You have understated the problem of "discrepancy as there is need for large corrections", as it is the biggest ever imaginable discrepancy. There is a need to look at the fundamentals. Energy cannot be 'dark' - non-interacting - as we cannot perceive it directly, but perceive it only through the effects of its interactions. Only because it is smooth and persistent, it cannot be called energy, as fluids have that characteristic. The dark matter concept arose out of the galaxy rotation curve, which uses the 'present rate of expansion' determined by galactic red-shift and the theoretical age of the universe. The mismatch has led to the speculation regarding inflation, which has been accepted on the assumption that since big-bang, the universe is 'expanding' continuously. But the observation of galactic blue-shift and mergers challenge this view. What if the universe is a closed system and big bang is like a pebble thrown to a circular pond? The surface water moves in waves, which rebounds from the periphery. Suppose this process repeats itself as held by ancient Indians. With every cycle, the velocity of 'expansion' would reduce. This will explain why we are at a far ahead location than would be predicted by the current rate of expansion without inflation. This will also explain the anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background.

    Because of blue-shift, we can assume that the galaxies appear to move apart at times to come close at other times like the planets in the solar system. This implies that the universe is a closed system which rotates on its axis. This means the galaxy rotation curve is fiction and dark matter/energy concepts myth. We have written about these to the Nobel trio in 2012 without any response.

    You are right about the role of plasma (regardless of its charge) in gravitational lensing, as plasma is distributed by gravitational field around stellar objects and refraction law of electromagnetic light would apply depending on its density. In the thread of Dr. Collin Walker, we have discussed this aspect. Regarding relativity, you can see our essay: "Reasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics" in this contest, where we have raised these issues.

    Way back in 2007, we had written to Sir Anthony Legget that there is a macro equivalent for every micro object or event including superposition, entanglement and spin without any 'mystery'. We had given the example of Jupiter and proton, whose internal structures are identical. Schrödinger equation in so-called one dimension Hψ = Eψ (it is a second order equation as it contains a term x2, which is in two dimensions and mathematically implies area) is converted to three dimensional by addition of two similar factors for y and z axis. Three dimensions mathematically imply volume. Addition of three (two dimensional) areas does not generate (three dimensional) volume and x2+y2+z2 ≠ (x.y.z). Hence, the Schrödinger equation could not be solved for other than hydrogen atoms. For many electron atoms, the so called solutions simply consider them as many one-electron atoms, ignoring the electrostatic energy of repulsion between the electrons and treating them as point charges frozen to some instantaneous position. Even then, the problem remains to be solved.

    If there is symmetry, there cannot be any mechanism to break it without destroying it (human body is one example). The mathematics of Higg's mechanism is questionable. Same with Dirac. SM is bound to remain incomplete as graviton will never be found. In QCD, the non-linearities in the theory have dramatic physical effects. One coherent, non-linear effect of the gluons is to "confine" both the quarks and gluons so that none of these particles can be found directly as excitations of the vacuum. Likewise, a continuous "chiral symmetry", normally exhibited by a theory of light quarks, is broken by the condensation of chirally oriented quark/anti-quark pairs in the vacuum. The resulting physics of QCD is thus entirely different from what one would expect from the underlying theory, with the interaction effects having a dominant influence.

    There are many unexplained questions relating to the strings. For example, given the measurement problem of quantum mechanics, what happens when a string is measured? Does the uncertainty principle apply to the whole string? Or does it apply only to some section of the string being measured? Does string theory modify the uncertainty principle? If we measure its position, do we get only the average position of the string? If the position of a string is measured with arbitrarily high accuracy, what happens to the momentum of the string? Does the momentum become undefined as opposed to simply unknown? What about the location of an end-point? If the measurement returns an end-point, then which end-point? Does the measurement return the position of some point along the string? (The string is said to be a Two dimensional object extended in space. Hence its position cannot be described by a finite set of numbers and thus, cannot be described by a finite set of measurements.) How do the Bell's inequalities apply to string theory? We must get answers to these questions first before we probe more and spend (waste!) more money in such research.

    In our essay here, we have shown that even the so-called chaotic systems are really not chaotic, but have some underlying mechanism not evident to us.

    Regards,

    basudeba

      Dear Sir,

      Thank you for your comment, Actually what I mean be discontinuity in this essay is as it was explained here and not by other means. I have brought up some theories and askes some critical questions without direct conclusion or if the these theories will be valid in future, generally I refer to a broader picture and a need for new thinking and the fact that physics alone can't give us the whole picture.

      Furthermore I meant, there are hidden parts in our world that can't be observed by us or our instrument, simply only considering the diver behind the genetics or anihilation of particles considering the true mechanisem, or emergence of life etc. I hope I have been able to provide a clearer explanation.

      I'll your essay shortley.

      Kind regards

      Koorosh

      10 days later

      Dear Koorosh,

      Well done on your interesting essay. I will pick on the point where you mentioned dark matter.

      If dark matter exists and is very abundant within a galaxy, since its density distribution can be enhanced around gravitational objects could it have played a role in earth-based light experiments like those of Michelson and Morley?

      Regards,

      Akinbo

        Dear Koorosh Shahdaei,

        As I promised in my Essay page, I have read your nice Essay. Here are my comments:

        1) Although I work principally on main stream physics, I am not particularly interested on inflating universe, multiverse, and string theories. I find indeed general relativity and quantum theory as the most interesting.

        2) This should have been an interesting Essay also in previous contests "It From Bit or Bit From It?" and "Is Reality Digital or Analog? ".

        3) Concerning your statement that "we leave in a closed universe with substantial amount of curvature with regards to its gravitational properties considering present gravitational theories such as Einstein's general relativity", you cold be interested to this paper of mine: http://arxiv.org/abs/1211.1373.

        4) I agree with your statement that the standard model has challenges to overcome.

        5) I find intriguing your idea we have our foundations in few distinct and discontinued universes and can only understand distinct chunks from few domains while some other domains are hidden to us. I suggest you to attempt to supply mathematical rigor to your theory of discontinuity.

        In any case, your Essay gave me fun. Thus, I will give you a high score.

        Best luck in the Contest, Ch.

          Dear professor Corda,

          Thank you indeed for your reading my essay.

          Regarding your comment: " I suggest you to attempt to supply mathematical rigor to your theory of discontinuity". The main argument is "quantity" itself that bridges us to math and physics. For instance conceousness or teleportation or similarly the driver behind genetic world, don't have quatities and can't fit into math. But what we can inffer is the fact that we have discontinuity and clearly we have e.g. conceousness which doesn't fit into math and physics because of absence of "quantity" in the physical world that we otherwise can measure.

          Hope I have been more clear.I will score your essay shortley and wish you good luck.

          Warm regards

          Koorosh

          Dear Akinbo,

          Thank you for your comment, if you would consider general relativity it would because of space curvature, but for short distances it would be neglectable, assuming dark matter should have similar effect then it would be impossible to be measured. Unfortunately I am not a fun of dark matter theory and I haven't read anywhere whether this theory regards curvature of space as GR does, but the fact that it is hypothesized that there exist a non baryonic particle, then it is not clear whether this hypothesized particle would have similar properties like ether or similar even so such particle doesn't intractable with matter, so what about light?

          Kind regards

          Koorosh

          20 days later

          Dear Mr. Shahdael,

          I thought that your engrossing essay was exceptionally well written and I do hope that it fares well in the competition.

          I think Newton was wrong about abstract gravity; Einstein was wrong about abstract space/time, and Hawking was wrong about the explosive capability of NOTHING.

          All I ask is that you give my essay WHY THE REAL UNIVERSE IS NOT MATHEMATICAL a fair reading and that you allow me to answer any objections you may leave in my comment box about it.

          Joe Fisher

            22 days later

            Koorosh,

            A very interesting viewpoint. I think you sum up the physics of current fundamental assumptions very well. It's entirely incoherent.

            However I think I can well demonstrate to you that the problem is purely one of ignorance and theoretical entrenchment, so that such a theory would be 'giving up'.

            There is a different and consistent set of assumptions which provide the 'code' to fit the whole jigsaw puzzle together. The first thing you'd need to do is look at my last 5 (all finalists) essay here, and the video. Various other bits (all of which you identify plus others) are tidied into place in other papers archived on Academia.edu. My 2010-11 essay ('2020 vision') suggested it would take 10 years of intellectual evolution to penetrate current doctrine, we're only half way there and on target.

            I challenge you to study the model and then claim it isn't POSSIBLE to adjust interpretations to make our understanding of nature coherent.

            New 9 minute video.

            Webarchive papers on most aspects of the 'Discrete Field' model (DFM).

            This years essay really just takes the mathematical (& QM) aspects of the complete ontology. The scoring suggests it's now better understood.

            Very well done for highlighting the disunified nature of current doctrine and models. That was an essential task and most seem genuinely to not believe it's the case! We shouldn't score on 'agreement' with theories, and I have half a mind that your essay may have been satirical!? But a good score anyway.

            best wishes

            Peter

              Peter,

              Thank you for your comments, I'll read your material and will get back.

              Good luck

              Dear Mr. fisher,

              I will once again go through your essay.

              Warm regards

              Koorosh

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