| Re: Matter is everything in a void: Lloyd; What I’ve been trying to get across is that when we talk about terminology of measurement such as temperature, voltage, flux, pressure, and so on, we are talking about a specific distribution of absolute motion within a system. Though I suppose all motion can be viewed as velocity if you make the time increment short enough, Absolute motion in most systems is a distribution consisting of various types of motion. Wave motion is the predominant type of motion but linear and angular are also types of motion. The primary thing to remember is that uniform motion results in the property of matter we call inertia and thus it is this motion that gives us our concept of MASS. Wave symmetry is a type of uniform motion and it is this type that produces our concepts of point particles. Those who understand wave mechanics quickly grasp the interactions of fundamental matter when the concept of absolute motion and self-affinity properties are applied. Attempting to discuss wave mechanic with novice members has proven to be far to difficult, so I have kept the discussions more simplified. Temperature and pressure have no relevance when we view reality at its most fundamental levels, just as computer programming languages have no relevance when you discuss the bits and bytes level of machine code. You seem to be the one who wishes to discuss fundamentals using the higher level terminology, not me. At this fundamental level you can only view motion and bonding properties as being significant.
__________________ David |