Gravity as due to Falling Space

Jerry W. Decker ( (no email) )
Sun, 16 May 1999 05:34:15 -0500

Hi Folks!

You might want to check out this interesting page on the "Theory of
Gravity of Falling Space"

http://www.wakkanet.fi/~fields/

It is generally believed that space is a vacuum, nonexistence, and that
only the matter within it is essential and meaningful. =

Albert Einstein saw it differently: space could have motion, and this
motion could explain gravity. =

This thought is interesting and it was one of the stimuli that led to
this theory. It was particularly inspiring because Einstein=92s solution
sounded erroneous, however, and it failed to produce a reasonable
explanation for gravity.

Gravity and the atom are one and the same thing, in spite of appearances
to the contrary. Space is a state which seeks to maintain its volume. In
a gravity field, space is falling! =

The terminal point of falling is the nucleus of the atom, and without
falling space the atom could not exist. This is why gravity reaches
across light years without any delay in time. =

Atoms are thought to be matter, and matter would seem to be the opposite
of empty space. But there is no =91concrete=92 matter, instead there is a=
n
accelerating motion of space.

The nucleus of an atom is a locus in which the acceleration of falling
space has reached its extreme extent. It is also the place in which
energy is unable to escape in the form of radiation. It is a black hole!
------------
This appears to be an inertial/cycloid type of effect inherent in all
atoms, thus making them push against themselves to produce what we call
gravity. What an interesting idea!
--- =

Jerry Wayne Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com
http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science"
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