just george
Bull**** Artist ENTP 8w7
- Local time
- Tomorrow 7:43 AM
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2013
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- 881
Something has been bouncing around in my head for a while, and I thought to tap it out and see what you guys think.
When we talk about space, matter, and particles, people generally assume that they exist in some sort of isolation, whereby space is completely empty, and everything travels through it - a bit like space being an empty canvas, that you can technically put coordinates on to measure the movement of things through it.
I was thinking about what matter really is, and how it relates to space, particularly in relation to faster than light propagation, the behavior of fast moving particles, gravity etc.
So I thought what if space it actually a counterpart to matter that has an effect on the physical world greater than just a coordinate system. What if there is some kind of "drag", as things move through space.
If this were true, and we tried to find something similar to use as a perceptual crutch, we might imagine air as being something in the background that has a bit of drag, but really isn't that heavy in the context of, say, shooting a bullet through it.
When bullets go through air, they move laterally, in a long sort of wave.
Doesn't it therefore stand to reason that photons are in fact particles that are oscillating because of aether drag?
And if that is so, then wouldn't we consider photons to be matter, and therefore potentially useful in creating or altering elements, in the same way that we alter molecules via addition of electrons? (that don't exist.).
Further, if atoms move around, and affect the aether around them, then couldn't we say that a magnet is an arrangement of atoms that creates movement in the aether counterpart, a bit like a pump, which we then call a magnetic field?
Anyway, just thought to tap that out for the sake of memory and getting things straight in my head. Cheerios
When we talk about space, matter, and particles, people generally assume that they exist in some sort of isolation, whereby space is completely empty, and everything travels through it - a bit like space being an empty canvas, that you can technically put coordinates on to measure the movement of things through it.
I was thinking about what matter really is, and how it relates to space, particularly in relation to faster than light propagation, the behavior of fast moving particles, gravity etc.
So I thought what if space it actually a counterpart to matter that has an effect on the physical world greater than just a coordinate system. What if there is some kind of "drag", as things move through space.
If this were true, and we tried to find something similar to use as a perceptual crutch, we might imagine air as being something in the background that has a bit of drag, but really isn't that heavy in the context of, say, shooting a bullet through it.
When bullets go through air, they move laterally, in a long sort of wave.
Doesn't it therefore stand to reason that photons are in fact particles that are oscillating because of aether drag?
And if that is so, then wouldn't we consider photons to be matter, and therefore potentially useful in creating or altering elements, in the same way that we alter molecules via addition of electrons? (that don't exist.).
Further, if atoms move around, and affect the aether around them, then couldn't we say that a magnet is an arrangement of atoms that creates movement in the aether counterpart, a bit like a pump, which we then call a magnetic field?
Anyway, just thought to tap that out for the sake of memory and getting things straight in my head. Cheerios