Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
Elements of Physics: Matter
Unavailable
Elements of Physics: Matter
Unavailable
Elements of Physics: Matter
Ebook18 pages13 minutes

Elements of Physics: Matter

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

This is the first of at least three essays on the elements of physics. I have dealt with these ideas in other works to some extent, but feel no compunction in laying them out in different formats for readers to grasp the full import. And extraneous matters in other works of mine where these problems crop up may dissuade other readers from perusing them. The first chapter points out logical contradictions in the classical theory of atoms. It shows that it is inconsistent with known properties of matter under the stress of force brought about through acceleration. The second chapter discusses inconsistencies in the plenum supposition. It first supposes that a plenum has one basic substance, and shows this is also inconsistent with known properties of matter. Such a simple substance cannot explain the world and its differing objects coherently. I also point out that a plenum is a continuum and inconsistent with a finite world of distinct objects and also incompatible with mathematical truths. The third chapter supposes a plenum of compound substances. This will not work either because it is inconsistent with known properties of physics and requires infinite velocity to be considered. But infinite velocity is illogical in a finite framework of matter, space and time. In the fourth chapter I ridicule the assumptions of modern physics that amount to a world composed of nothing, not just almost nothing, but nothing. I once again explain my own theorem of motion briefly that explains all of these inconsistencies and of those of the past ages.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 14, 2014
ISBN9781311316059
Unavailable
Elements of Physics: Matter
Author

Edward E. Rochon

I write for my health and the health of the world. Often the cure rivals the disease in grief and aches. My writing career started at twelve when I attempted to write a sequel to Huckleberry Finn but never finished it. My writings have included poetry, plays, a novel, non-fiction and writing newsletters for here and there. Recently, I am dabbling into short stories. Apart from newsletters, nothing has been published in print. I bought an audio recording of one of my poems but threw it away in disgust due to an inappropriate reading by the narrator. 'Contra Pantheism...' was my first eBook. About a hundred eBooks have been published since including some books of verse, and my essays collected into five volumes, and one volume of collected poems. A few other types of literature are on my list of published works. My essays deal with fundamental questions of philosophy as well as natural philosophy (science.) On the whole, my works are as far above the writings of Plato and Aristotle as the material power of the United States is over that of Ancient Greece. I once asked myself if I had ever written anything memorable, but couldn't remember exactly what I had written. I started to check my manuscripts but stopped as it seemed the answer to the question was obvious. Gore Vidal mentioned in one of his memoirs that writers tend to forget what they write and are a bad source to ask about their works. Gore knew a lot of writers. I have not and may have been a bit hard on myself. Apart from self-improvement and maybe making a few bucks, my main goal is to bring about a golden age for mankind. Being a man, this sounds appealing. It is pointless to desist and all small measures are worth the effort. Albert Camus thought suicide the only serious philosophical question. He was a fool and died young. Suicide is a waste of time. The most important functional question is: How do I get what I want? The one question that trumps this is the ultimate question of intent: What should I want? As Goethe pointed out: Be careful what you wish for in your youth, you might get it in middle age.

Related to Elements of Physics

Related ebooks

Physics For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Elements of Physics

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words