| Re: Corporeal Matter is an Omnidirectionally Accelerating Field -
10-09-2007, 06:08 PM
Dear RP, Thanks for your response, but again you failed to answer the question. I asked simply: what is your simple definition of gravity?' You answered with Einstein's words. Are they your words too? My work is based on Einstein's work, consequently I selected his definition that agrees with mine, or conversely. Of course they're my words also. As far the Eastern philosophies of equality are concerned, I have read much and find many parallels to the equality I see, but prefer to find the truth through experience and intuition, rather than in the words of a book. I have yet to find the simplest truth in any book, but continue to read. What relevance do you see betweenTao, I Ching, physics, equality, gravity and you and me? "For every action there is a reaction, equal and opposite". - Newton. Gravity is both a pull and a push; likewise the I Ching and Tao corroborate same. Many eminent scholars consider the I Ching to be among the greatest books ever written- and the Tao to be among the most powerful symbolic icons. I was just sorta thinking you might find time to browse through some books about the I Ching, if not the I Ching itself, which is characteristically misunderstood by many Westerners. Having yet to find the the simplest truth in any book, it's unlikely you'll find what you're looking for by corresponding with me - I've written ten, and refer to hundreds of them over the years and most of my intuition and experience is based on that referential experience. I see abundant 'relevance between Tao, I Ching, equality, gravity, you and me'. Much more relevance than it's practical for me to elaborate on for you at this time. (You may profit from reading and reflecting on more books than you do...). One last question: Did Einstein define Gravity in any other way besides advanced calculus? Was mathematics the only solution he could find? My advise is that you read a few books by and about Einstein and draw conclusions that render answers to your questions. The equivalence of gravitational and inertial mass values is central to his General Theory ('Gravity is acceleration') and the uniform velocity of light (Celeritias constant - 'C') is key to his Special Theory, but then he wrote a lot of mathematics around both of those non mathematical facts, which may not interest you. = MJA Regards, - RP (George Berkeley, 1710) ... lay the beginning in a distinct explication of what is meant by thing, reality, existence: for in vain shall we dispute concerning the real existence of things, or pretend to any knowledge thereof, so long as we have not fixed the meaning of those words. "All things come out of the one and the one out of all things." - Heraclitus "Reality is an illusion - albeit a persistent one." - Einstein "Particles give me a headache." - Ibid |