Re: All you (n)ever wanted to know about the Ferochromon
From: | Simon Clarkstone <simon.clarkstone@...> |
Date: | Thursday, April 21, 2005, 20:02 |
On 4/21/05, Wesley Parish <wes.parish@...> wrote:
> Actually, to cut to the quick on the equations thingee, I suspect that the
> central equations of the Ferochromon would be a mixture of quantum mechanics
> and the mathematical monsters that make up chaos theory and fractal geometry
> - not all that different from the current cosmos, except for the serious
> downgrading of gravity from a central part of the nature of matter, to an
> incidental effect which explains why some things conglomerate and others
> don't - the equivalent of the electroweak in this current cosmos.
>
> (You've already indicated that the electroweak is incredibly strong in the
> Ferochromon - it's the electrostrong that structures crystals in this current
> cosmos, unless I've got it wrong. ;)
>
> Just don't take my word for it.
I suspect you are wrong (in as much as right and wrong exist for a
fictional universe). Our universe has no particles anything like
those described in the text. Also, the individual realms have
absolute motion (though not absolute position), i.e. relative to the
lattices, which is somewhat Aristotelian (I'm working on the math :-I)