Tuesday, January 13, 2015

All Force is Gravity

     I was trying to discover what fundamental forces exist in The Universe, years ago; so I called up my brother who holds a Ph.D. in laser physics.  He claimed that there are four fundamental forces:

(1) Gravity
(2) Electromagnetic Force
(3) Strong Nuclear Force
(4) Weak Nuclear Force

In order for something to have force upon other something or somethings, it must have mass.  As I have explained earlier, all matter is light.  Therefore, it is only light that has force properties.  Newton's Gravitational Theory stands as proven in science; so I don't question that.  The other three "fundamental forces", however, I do.

Having had to wade through some really messed up "science" in formulating my Metachemics, I thought that there could easily be errors in my brother's fundamental force tally.  The following is my reasoning:

If Electromagnetic Force exists, what is its range?  Does a one light unit exert Electromagnetic Force against every other one light unit even if it is on a Universal edge, as Gravity does?

Concerning a close range analysis, imagine two independent, one light particles.  They gravitate together to form a solid that modern physics claims produces a new fundamental force.  Then, another multi-light solid strikes the two light solid--breaking the two light particles apart.  Does the newly gained fundamental force disappear?  Is it negated in reality?  If the two light particles come together again, do they get the "fundamental" force back?

My guess in regard to the final two "fundamental forces" (Strong Nuclear and Weak Nuclear) is that they have been invented by modern physicists so that their flawed "science" supporters have a way to try to explain their data.  The misguided "scientist" can say: "There's a lot of force there (Strong Nuclear).  But, when the micro-forces (Weak Nuclear) are accounted for, the data comes out right."

My conclusion is the hypothesis:

All Force is Gravity

Paul Wharton
Father of Metachemics

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