Thoughts On Physics - Part 4 - A Local And Real Interpretation
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 Published On Apr 24, 2024

In this video I actually describe the local and real interpretation of this series. That being a universe that is local and real, and not only infinite in size but also infinite in scale. Where space-time is real and everything is basically just motion.

Essentially where the universe can be describe by fluid dynamics in five dimensions.

I swear it makes some sort of sense when explained.

This is of course just speculation. I am not a physicist, so watch this with a heavy dose of skepticism.


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There's a thought experiment that that uses something like the gear setup at 12:56 to describe time and scale I didn't include it because it just repeats what I've already said. However, I've included this in case you'd like another way to think of the relationship between time and scale.

Imagine that the gear setup from that video was a single unit, and replicas of this unit are linked together so that each unit is moved by the gears preceding it, and are moving the gears in the subsequent unit. Now imagine that this line of interconnected units is infinitely long. This line represents time and scale where each gear box represents a location in scale, while the speed of the gears represents the passage of time at that scale.

As an observer, the gear setup closest to you on this line would appear to be moving at a "normal" speed. In this case the last gear in the sequence will do one full rotation every minute. This your reference frame.

If you look down this line in the direction gears being moved by your reference unit, then each subsequent unit moves slower than the previous one. At some distance down the line the gears of each unit appear to be completely motionless relative to you. And this goes on for an infinitely long length. This represents the larger scale.

If you look down the other direction, towards the gear boxes that are moving your reference unit, then each preceding gear boxes would be going faster than the unit it moves. At some distance down the line the gears of each unit would appear to be moving too fast for you to see. And this goes on for an infinitely long length. This direction would represent the smaller scale.

Now, if you were to move along this line, say in the larger scale, then your reference gear box would move faster relative to you the further away you go. As would the "larger scale" gear boxes, which would appear to be moving faster the closer you got to them. When you are right next to them they appear to move at one full rotation a minute. Once you pass them and begin to move away from them, each unit would appear to move slower.

If you move in the other direction, then your reference unit would appear to slow down the further away from it you move. As you approach these "smaller scale" gear boxes they would also begin to appear to slow down until they are moving at one full rotation a minute when you are right next to them. Once you pass them by and begin to move away from them, they would continue to slow down the further away you move, until they appear to stop completely.

This is one way to think about the relationship between scale and time.

As in there is no absolute speed that they travel at. Everything is relative.


00:00 - Introduction
02:05 - Scale As A Dimension
04:24 - The Constants As Variables
09:00 - Time
11:52 - Relativity Of Time By Scale
15:10 - What Is Everything Made From Then?
18:49 - Origins From An Empty Universe
21:55 - Local And Real Particles
29:28 - Fields
30:00 - Quantum Spin Revisited
33:57 - Mass, Energy, And Motion
39:27 - Speculating About The Big Bang
45:10 - Outro

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