Re: Curvature as Energy
Posted: Mon Apr 17, 2017 11:21 pm
Impenitent wrote:are atoms perfectly stable?
I would argue that neither atoms nor numbers. Numbers as their continued reflection, by manifesting other rational numbers (pi being a more "abstract" example") maintain stability. All stability is reflection relative to time/space, with this reflection equivalent to a "propagation" or "multiplication"
what is your scale of structure?
The dimensions previously mentioned. All structures are merely symmetry through reflections. The observation or "reflectivity" is the observation of structures. In regards to the "size" (in everyday speech) this would have to be at the quantum level.
abstractions are neither stable nor structural...
That is a separate argument, however we can both agree that "the physical" is not either. If this is the case, that neither are "stable" (although I do not agree with it) then numbers "must" have physical counter parts. Abstractions are structural because of the manifestation of ratios, symmetry and proportions. However, the "time-scale" of that structure is a separate question.
some curves have great energy
Yes...I agree %100, I would argue that all curvature has energy. With that being said, the relfectivity of numbers (as reflection is a curvature) would mean that all numbers have "energy counter-parts through particle-waves".
-Imp