Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Course 5 on Compactification And Yakawa Couplings, Session 2, Part Two(2)

So, with the quilt, the spaces described are not matter, these spaces bear insignificant energy or electromagnetic energy, and are compressible. So, what does that make the quilt? Compactible. How could the quilt be viewed of as space? Matter is mostly empty space. The more you break down phenomena, the more that you find it to be empty space. Yet reality exists. All reality depends on a framework of certain relative truth that depends on a pervasive logic, integrating into an overall reality. If this reality is truly real, then this logic shall be completely pervasive. Something that is matter has mass. Mass of the right atmospheric pressure and gravitational pull on earth will have weight. Something that is actual space as we know it to be will hot have weight. A mass of a quilt will have weight. Something that is of the globally distinguishable that is not overtly matter, energy, or electromagnetic energy will hot have size or weight in a gravitational field. A quilt consists of a mass that also has many spaces. By some weird concoction, the space may be able to form an energy. Yet, is it? No! Why? To distinguish that, yes, all is in a sense space -- yet that what is termed of as space means basically nothingness by my present content. Also, yes, all is energy -- yet that what is termed of as energy by my present context is stuff that resists compactification. What do I mean by resist? If you smush a quilt enough to eliminate the holes, you will start to encounter difficulty in smushing it any further. Why? The quilt is stuff. Stuff doesn't want to go away. If stuff gets smushed to where it doesn't want to smush any more, all of the loose spaces are gone and the stuff is said to be fully compactified or compact. The process of compactifying a phenomenon is said to be COMPACTIFICATION.

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