Re: All you (n)ever wanted to know about the Ferochromon
From: | H. S. Teoh <hsteoh@...> |
Date: | Thursday, April 21, 2005, 18:58 |
On Thu, Apr 21, 2005 at 08:02:52PM +1200, Wesley 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.
Hmm. The prob is, there *is* no gravity in Ferochromon! Well, unless
you rationalize convergences as gravity... hmm. But then how do you
fit in other stuff like divergences? Anti-gravity?
> (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. ;)
[...]
Oh? How did I indicate that electroweak is incredibly strong in
Ferochromon? I wasn't aware there's anything analogous to electroweak
in Ferochromon. :-) Now, FE mode, OTOH, might very well be QCD... but
I don't know about the other forces.
T
--
Why do conspiracy theories always come from the same people??