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<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>T<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCLQm_08" align="right" hspace="5" width="200" height="59" border="0">he
theory of quantum matter.</b></font></font> In order to show the
possibility of a spatiomaterialist explanation of quantum mechanics,
I will describe one way that the relevant phenomena might be
constituted by space and matter as substances enduring through time.
This will require a refinement of the assumptions made thus far about
the natures of both matter and space. It is a refinement is a basic
aspect, because it has to do with how these substances <i>endure
through time</i>.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">Space
and matter were postulated in </span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/LoOtfS.htm" target="Lo"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2" style="font-size: 10pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Spatiomaterialism</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">
as substances with essential natures that are opposite in a most
fundamental way. The parts of space all have essential natures that
include geometrical relationships to one another, so that the
existence of one depends on the existence of all the others. But the
parts of matter can all exist independently of one another. Being
opposite in that way, it was possible to explain why bits of matter
have spatial relations to one another and how change is possible by
assuming that bits of matter exist together with space as a world by
each coinciding with some part of space or another. These are the
basic assumptions of spatiomaterialism, and it is possible to make
further assumptions about the natures of space and matter, as long as
they are consistent with these basic assumptions. </span></font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">I made
further assumptions about the nature of space and matter in order to
explain how the laws of classical physics are true. I assumed that
the nature of matter coincides with space in all the forms that are
counted by physics in its principle of the conservation of mass and
energy: rest mass, kinetic energy, two kinds of force-field matter
(electric charges and gravitational fields), and two kinds of waves
of forces (electromagnetic waves and gravitational waves). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">I made
another assumption about the nature of space and matter in order to
explain Einsteins special theory of relativity ontologically. I
assumed that space has an inherent motion (or “ether”) which
determines the velocity of light), and that material objects suffer
Lorentz distortions as a function of their velocity relative to the
inherent motion. (In order to suggest the inevitability of the
Lorentz distortions, I anticipated a conclusion that I will defend
here, namely, that material objects are constituted by unit-like
interactions that are equivalent to the two-way electromagnetic
interactions involved in the an interferometer.)</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">I made yet
another assumption about the nature of space and matter in order to
explain Einsteins general theory of relativity. I assumed that
centers of matter exert a force on the surrounding space that
accelerates the inherent motion (or ether) and, thereby, accelerates
all the bits of matter that coincide with space by way of it. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In order to
explain ontologically the truth of the laws of quantum mechanics, I
will make further assumptions about both space and matter. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">S<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAC8AAAAOCAMAAACICbUNAAAAYFBMVEXjx5vVu5HHroi4on6qlXSciWqOfGF/cFdxY01jV0MybUFVSjpGPjA4MSYqJR17AAAcGBMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAC+ZdJaAAAAiUlEQVR4nJ2S4QoEIQiEp8vUqLz2/V92jd3jYOlH7RCD0KeoiO+xJbzgsaw/T6pxg0+FkmzwcsG9GiFayxheEJvJlA/ZWgIMoTqqHSgfBJRE9uCP37zBf9p4XOkK3VR1yosSe+VOWTxOXl8zybAnf/fDysH7ER7JPJzHwljTlL/VVvezqHf3sKMTrCMSyUdX+SQAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="TtsOtkCLQm_09" align="right" hspace="5" width="125" height="37" border="0">pace.</font>
As we have already assumed, space has an inherent motion. This aspect
of the nature of space determines the velocity of light. This
assumption about the motion of electromagnetic waves (or photons) is
crucial to the spatiomaterialist explanation of relativity theory,
because it is the motion of objects with rest mass relative to the
inherent motion that gives rise to the Lorentz distortions which
explain the phenomena of special relativity. And the acceleration of
the inherent motion itself relative to space is what explains the
gravitational phenomena covered by general relativity. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
inherent motion of space is what plays the role that the ether was
supposed to play in classical physics. The inherent motion mediates
all the motion and interactions among bits of matter, because it is
the aspect of space by which bits of matter coincide with parts of
space. Since the inherent motion goes both ways in every direction of
three dimensional space, there is a certain velocity at any point
that is at “rest” relative to the inherent motion itself (that
is, at rest in the ether). Relative to that inertial frame, light has
the velocity, c, <i>both ways </i>in every direction in three
dimensional space. But rest relative to the inherent motion may not
be rest relative to space, because in gravitational fields, the
inherent motion (or ether) is in motion relative to space and even
accelerating. That aspect of its nature can, however, be set aside
for now, because the inherent motion in substantival space that is
the relevant aspect in explaining the quantum nature of matter.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">To
make it concrete, consider what the inherent motion must involve in
order to explain electromagnetic waves. It must exist at every
location in space at every moment. It must always have the same
velocity in space (except, of course, for the changes that occur in
gravitational fields). In each part of space, it must sweep through
space in every possible direction, that is, both ways in every
direction in three dimensional space. And it must be able to carry
electromagnetic waves of every possible wavelength and every possible
phase of every wavelength across every point in space, preserving
their wavelengths and phases. (And as we shall see, it must do this
for photons of two kinds, one of each possible orientation of spin.) </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since the
inherent motion is sweeping through every part of space at the same
time, what is sweeping through any part of space in any given
direction is like of a wave front. The same motion sweeps through all
the points in every two dimensional plane of which it is part.
Indeed, there is such a wave front sweeping in every direction
through every point of space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Nor is it
inappropriate to speak of the inherent motion as having waves, since
it carries every possible wavelength of light, and as we shall see,
the wavelengths of those wave fronts make a difference in what
happens. It takes a certain period time for a photon (a complete
cycle of electromagnetic radiation) to pass any given point, and
since the photon is carried along by the inherent motion, such a
cycle marks out a certain distance (its wavelength) over and over
along its path. Indeed, since this is always happening, there is
always already a series of wavelengths implicitly marked out in space
by the inherent motion at any given wavelength, each going through a
cycle at the same time as all the others, that is, at the present
moment. This pattern holds for every wavelength and for every phase
of each wavelength both ways in every direction. And it holds both
ways in every direction for each point in space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">I
elaborate this implication of postulating the inherent motion in
order to make explicit what all I will <i>not </i>try to explain
about the nature of space. By calling it an “inherent motion in
space”, I mean that it is an aspect of the nature of space itself.
That means, at a minimum that it is occurring at every location in
space, whether there is any light there or not. But what is more, it
means that space is what <i>causes </i>light to move as it does. The
inherent motion at any location <i>in space carries </i>light along
with it, when matter of that kind happens to coincide with that part
of space. Unless the inherent motion of space were responsible for
the velocity of light, it would not be possible to explain
relativistic phenomena ontologically. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">The
inherent motion, therefore, marks out distances in space according to
any cycle of changes occurring locally as time passes. This is to
talk about the inherent motion as if it were a real set of events
taking place in space, and as I said earlier, it may be possible to
formulate a simpler spatiomaterialist explanation in which the
inherent motion is merely a spatio-temporal aspect of the nature of
space as a substance, that is, a geometrical structure about space
</span></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><i>and
time</i></span></font></font><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">.
The inherent motion is, after all, basically a relationship between
distances in space and periods of time that are built into the
essential nature of space. That is to add a temporal aspect to the
spatial relationships that space was originally assumed to have in
</span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/LoOtfS.htm" target="Lo"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="1" style="font-size: 1pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Spatiomaterialism</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">
in order to explain the three-dimensional geometrical structure of
space. </span></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Each part
of space has not only an essential geometrical relationship to every
other part of space at the present moment, but also an essential
relationship to future and past moments in the existence of every
other part of space. To be sure, the past and future states of parts
of space do not exist, because nothing exists but what exists at
present, if substance endure through time. That means that one
locations relationship to future or past states of another
location is a temporally complex property of space, which determines
the maximum velocity with which what happens in one part of space and
affect what happen in other parts of space. But that temporally
complex property corresponds to a temporally simple relationship that
actually exists among the parts of space as time passes. That is what
I mean to emphasize by talking about the wave patterns set up in
space by the inherent motion sweeping though every part of space,
both ways, in every direction. These patterns may be nothing more
than simply how all the parts of space endures through time, but
speaking of these patterns as being laid out by the inherent motion
in real time dramatizes the role they play in explaining the
regularities described by quantum mechanics. And at this point,
clarity about what is being assumed is more important than
simplicity, since it is not necessary to have the simplest
ontological explanation in order to show that there is such an
explanation. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">M<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAC8AAAAPCAMAAABDVWaoAAAAYFBMVEXjx5vVu5HHroi4on6qlXSciWqOfGF/cFdxY01jV0MybUFVSjpGPjA4MSYqJR17AAAcGBMNDAkAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAADSUW97AAAAkklEQVR4nLXS6wqDMAwF4NyWHWmjne//sEvZdIOJqLD8SOnhawmlNJ0rmuZTdcXT4Vq9gIixxJob2fXWnNCWODLAvkfwkKxEKPkjtLQgrlHzcIlvP789qmXOXrDe77CqFExbnktno98/HgUQiu15XmOPNqB30XojC3Pd9mLZPF8GZv205DB9de7prz9Y1/w//88T9OAWuSz2HGAAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="TtsOtkCLQm_10" align="right" hspace="5" width="125" height="39" border="0">atter.</font>
In order to give a deeper explanation of the nature of matter, we
must distinguish between two kinds of matter, which I will call
“force-field matter” and “quantum matter.” Three of the six
forms of matter that were distinguished in order to explain the truth
of classical mechanics are forms of force-field matter (electric
fields, gravitational fields, and gravitational waves), and three are
forms of quantum matter (rest mass matter, kinetic energy matter, and
photons). Force-field matter has already been explained ontologically
as involving a property (or temporally variable condition) of parts
of space (though there is more to be said about it). And it is the
nature of quantum matter that will bear the major burden of this
ontological explanation of the quantum mechanics. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>F<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCLQm_11" align="right" hspace="5" width="175" height="35" border="0">orce-field
matter.</b></i> By “force-field matter,” I mean forms of matter
that are constituted by a changeable property or condition of parts
of space. The property of space acts like a force, because it changes
the way in which bits of matter coinciding with that part of space
move and interact. Consider the three forms of force-field matter:</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Gravitational
fields.</i> Gravitational matter is one kind of force-field matter,
and we can set it aside, because it has already been explained.
Gravitational matter is the matter that exists as the force field
that gravitating bodies impose on the surrounding space, accelerating
the inherent motion (the ether) toward themselves. Like any form of
potential energy, the quantity of matter involved in a gravitational
field is already counted in the rest masses of the objects exerting
the forces. That is, their rest masses decline as the bodies attract
one another, acquiring kinetic energy at the expense of potential
energy (though as we shall see, force-field matter is not actually
converted to kinetic <i>quantum matter </i>until the material objects
acquire kinetic energy <i>relative to the inherent motion</i> by
colliding with other material objects near the center). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Gravitational
waves.</i> Since gravitation is a force that propagates with the
inherent motion of space, gravitating bodies can set up gravitational
waves, which exist independently of material objects with rest mass,
for example, from binary stars, which are in orbit around one
another. But this is still a form of force-field matter, not quantum
matter, because the gravitational force propagating at the velocity
of light acts on space, not on bits of matter directly. It is by
accelerating the inherent motion in the parts of space it encounters
that gravitation accelerates bits of matter, not by interacting with
bits of matter directly. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Electric
fields.</i> An electric charge also imposes a force field on the
space surrounding the material objects that has the charge, and that
is another form of force-field matter. The electric field is another
property (or variable condition) of space which affects other
material objects with electric charges. Electromagnetic matter
contained in electric charges is already counted in the rest masses
of the objects that have the charge, and matter is conserved, because
as we have seen, the consumption of potential energy is counted as a
negative quantity.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
electric field is more complex than the gravitational field, as we
have seen, because changes in the electric field cause magnetic
forces. But that connection between electric and magnetic forces,
which is described by Maxwells equations, can be explained as
another aspect of the nature of space. That is, changes in the
electric field caused by the motion of an object with rest mass
propagate as a result of the inherent motion in space, and thus, the
electromagnetic interactions are relative to the inherent motion (as
we have assumed in explaining Einsteinian relativity). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">Quantum
electrodynamics is the gauge field theory that is currently accepted
by physics as an explanation of the electric charge and its behavior,
and such a theory lends itself to a spatiomaterialist ontological
explanation, because it portrays forces as being exerted by the
exchange of particles, called the &quot;boson&quot; of the gauge
field. In this case, it is a virtual photon. The electric charge is
described as having a certain orientation in a complex vector plane,
and the forces exerted on the charged particle by the virtual photons
are just what is required for the orientation of the charge to be
unchanged in that complex vector plane by its change of location.
Those forces turn out to the forces described by Maxwells law. But
since the force field is explained as virtual photons emerging from
space as a result of the charged particle's motion at its location in
the field, the gauge field theory is the kind of explanation that can
be given an ontological explanation by spatiomaterialism. (More will
be said about the nature of the electric charge and the gauge bosons
that mediate interactions among charged particles as required as we
go along and, more completely, when we take up the basic particles.
See </span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/L/LoOtkCaLeCosGaugeField.htm" target="Lo"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="1" style="font-size: 1pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Change:
Basic Objects</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">.)</span></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>Q<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCLQm_12" align="right" hspace="5" width="175" height="32" border="0">uantum
matter. </b></i>The nature of quantum matter is the basis of this
ontological explanation of quantum mechanics, and the remaining three
forms of matter (rest mass matter, kinetic energy matter, and
electromagnetic waves) are all forms of quantum matter. Like the new
assumption about the nature of space, this new assumption about
quantum matter recognizes a temporal aspect to the nature of matter,
though it is a temporal property suited to the opposite nature of
matter. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Parts
of space are all connected geometrically, and since the inherent
motion connects them all temporally as well, the endurance of space
through time is characterized by the inherent motion (or the
spatio-temporal geometry) described above. Much the same way of
enduring through time also characterizes force-field matter, since
force-field matter is spread out continuously in regions of space
through which the inherent motion is constantly flowing. But since
bits of matter can exist independently of one another, there is
another way in which they can have a further temporal aspect to their
nature. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
new assumption is that quantum matter is just a series of cyclic
events that occur over time. That is, bits of quantum matter endure
through time as a series of unit-like events whose cyclic nature
entails that each event gives rise to another event of the same kind
(unless it interacts with another bit of matter in some way and
another kind of cyclic event ensues). Since these events follow one
another as time passes, cycles of events (of the same kind) are a way
of counting time, much as the inherent motion in space allows periods
of time to be counted by the distance it crosses. These events will
be called “quantum event,” because these are the smallest changes
that can take place in a spatiomaterialism world (except for the
inherent motion itself in smaller parts of space). Quantum events
cannot be divided up in to smaller events, and so they are elementary
units. But since they are <i>cyclic </i>events, each gives rise to
another event, and since they reproduce in time, they explain the
endurance of bits of (quantum) matter through time. The way that
matter endures through time as a series of cyclic quantum events is
mainly what the “quantum” in quantum mechanics is referring to,
according to this spatiomaterialist explanation of quantum mechanics.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">An
“event” has both a spatial and a temporal dimension. It begins at
some place and time and ends at some place and time. What happens in
a quantum event is that a force is exerted and change is caused. The
force may cause a change in another force, as illustrated by the
photon, in which electric and magnetic forces are coupled in cycles.
Or the quantum event may be a force that changes the motion of an
object with rest mass, as we shall see holds in the case of the
motion of an object with rest mass.. Different forms of quantum
matter are constituted by different kinds of quantum events, as we
shall see. But since they are elemental events, they all have the
same, smallest size. That size is what is represented by “Plancks
constant”, <i>h</i>. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Plancks
constant is a certain size in a parameter called “action”. Though
action was recognized early in the Newtonian era as one kind of
physical quantity, it has nearly dropped out of contemporary physics
(except for the constant <i>h</i>), apparently because it need not be
mentioned in describing efficient causes. Action is, however, defined
in terms of a certain physical quantities that are mentioned as
efficient causes (such as spatial relations, mass, force, velocity,
acceleration, momentum, and energy). For our purposes, the most
useful way to think of action is as the <i>product of force times
distance times time</i>, as if a force were acting on something (such
as a unit mass) for a certain distance over a certain period of time.
</font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In units
that physicists take to be basic, action has the dimensions of <i>mass
</i>times <i>distance </i>squared per unit <i>time </i>(or mass times
distance squared per unit of time squared, all times time). And in
addition to thinking of it as force times distance times time, it can
be seen as <i>momentum (or mass times velocity) times distance </i>(that
is, as the integration of a change in momentum over the distance it
occurs). Alternatively, it can be seen as <i>energy (mass times
velocity squared) times time </i>(that is, as the integration of a
change in energy over the period of time it occurs). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In speaking
of momentum and kinetic energy, I assume that we are talking about
matter that is nearly at rest in the ether, where Newtonian laws hold
and momentum is approximately equal to mass times velocity and
kinetic energy is approximately equal to one-half of mass time the
square of velocity. This is not quite true, because according to the
special theory of relativity, mass increases with velocity. However,
by starting with rest mass as the quantity of matter constituting
particles at rest in the inherent motion, it will be possible to
explain why mass increases with velocity, because we will be able to
explain the extra mass as the matter making up its kinetic energy. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The idea
is, therefore, to interpret the quantum of action as an <i>event</i>,
that is, as a change of some kind that takes place in the world as a
result of something being done. This may be a little vague, but
remember that we are taking now about the most basic elements of what
exists in the world, and the nature of quantum events can be made
clear only by considering their various kinds. But since action is
measured in units that include both space and time, it is possible to
think of these events as having determinate boundaries in space and
time, that is, as beginning at some place and time and ending at some
place and time. That gives these events determinate locations in the
geometry of space and time as determined by the velocity of light,
that is, by the inherent motion. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Plancks
constant is a certain size of action, and we can explain why it
appears in all the equations of quantum theory, if we assume that
quantum events have an all-or-nothing character about them. Bits of
quantum matter endure, we assume, because they are constituted by
quantum events with a cyclic nature. Although cycles of quantum
events may follow one another continuously in time and space, there
is a unit-like nature about them, so that either a whole quantum
event occurs, or it does not occur at all. This means, on the one
hand, that nothing can happen that involves less than a unit of
action (except possibly the inherent motion), and on the other, that
everything that does happen to quantum matter is made up in some way
of a certain number and kinds of these elemental units of action. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
assumption that quanta all have the same amount of action is not as
restricting as it may seem, because quanta have widely varied
temporal and spatial dimensions. They can take place in a short
distance in a brief period of time, if the force is great enough, or
they can take place over a longer distance in a longer period of
time, when the force is weaker. But in order to spell out the
assumption that they have a unit-like nature, let us think of quanta
as having end points in space and time, so that quantum events can be
fit together as complete cycles in the spatio-temporal geometry of
the inherent motion of space in different ways. This model may be too
crude. It is unlikely that quantum events have anything as abrupt as
definite points at which one cycle ends and another begins. But that
is a way of keeping in mind the unit-like nature of these events,
even if it is just a place-holder to be replaced by a better
explanation of where and how one quantum event ends and another
quantum event begin. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">For
example, a better model of their unit-like nature would, perhaps, be
one in which interactions between different bits of matter can occur
only when whole cycles of the different bits of matter are lined up
somehow according to the spatio-temporal geometry of the inherent
motion in space. That is, given their precise locations in space and
time, the points at which quantum cycles stop and start would depend
on what they are interacting with and the direction from which they
are interacting, so that different starting points and stopping
points might hold if they were interacting with quantum cycles of
bits of matter from different directions in space, of different
kinds, or with different phases to their cycles. (Lining particles up
in this way could be, as we shall see, the role of their intrinsic
spin and its magnetic moment in mediating interactions of bits of
quantum matter.)</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Matter
is a substance, because it exists continuously over time, never
coming into existence nor going out of existence. We are assuming
that one form of matter can be converted into another, including
conversions between quantum matter and force-field matter (that is,
between potential and kinetic energy). But when matter exists in the
form of quantum matter, the endurance of bits of matter through time
is explained by the cyclic nature of the quantum events that
constitute their existence. That is, given that the quantum event
starts at some place and time, there is a certain place and time
where the cycle is complete, and at that point, another quantum event
begins. Since quantum events are related cyclically, they can
reproduce themselves in time. However, quantum cycles succeed one
another not only temporally, but also spatially, so that nothing is
flitting about discontinuously from place to place in space. Other
things being equal, quantum events give rise to other quantum events
of the same kind and dimensions as themselves. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Bits
of matter do, however, interact. I will say more about how they
interact in a moment, but in general, what happens is either the
conversion of matter between quantum forms and force-field forms of
matter and/or changes in the kinds of quantum matter. Force-field
matter is laid out in space, changing its shape with the motion of
the material objects that are imposing the forces. And since material
objects, their motion and photons are just cycles of quantum events
reproducing themselves in time, what changes are the kinds, numbers,
and dimensions of the quantum events constituting them. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since the
quantum events have a unit like nature, what happens to bits of
quantum and force-field matter in space involves fitting quantum
events together in space and time according to certain laws as if the
endurance of the world through time were the result of building a
brick wall into the future. Some bricks are simply stacked on top of
one another, as quantum cycles reproduce themselves in time. But when
bits of matter interact, the bricks fit together in more complex
ways, changing the sizes and locations of the bricks in the next row.
The space on which the wall is being built also plays a role, because
the sizes of the brick may also change with their locations (as in
force fields), and the effects of space on their sizes changes with
the locations of the bricks affecting space (as in changing location
in a force field). Nature is a master mason, never failing to lay in
the next layer of bricks according to fixed rules, and thus, there
are regularities about change as the brick wall is built into the
future. And the structures formed by them can be quite stable over
time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In order to
spell out the details of these “rules of quantum masonry,” I will
describe each of the forms of quantum matter and then take up the
issue about how they interact with one another. Some of the quantum
puzzles will be explained along the way, and in the end will, we will
see how their interactions explain the structure of the atom, the
Heisenberg uncertainty principle, and the Bell correlations. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">To
explain the endurance of matter by the cyclic nature of quantum
events may, however, make it seem that matter is not a substance at
all. If quantum events are ultimately just the exertion of a force in
some part of space making some other event occur that is also
constituted by forces, it is conceivable that quantum matter is just
a property of parts of space, much like force-field matter. Could
matter be entirely reducible to space? This is not what we assumed
when we took spatiomaterialism as the foundation for this ontological
way of doing philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
reduction of matter to space is, however, something that ontologists
should welcome, if it is possible, for it would be just as complete
as spatiomaterialism, but a simpler, and, thus, better ontological
explanation of the natural world. It is more or less what Einstein
was trying to do during the latter part of his life in attempting to
construct a unified field theory. He wanted to describe matter
another kind of curvature of spacetime, along with gravitation. If
something like that comes of this ontological explanation, then
spatiomaterialism will turn into spatialism.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">However, I
will put this possibility aside. In the first place, we would be
getting ahead of ourselves to assume at this point that spatialism is
true. We have yet to see how matter can be explained by cycles of
quantum events. And second, even if an ontological explanation of
quantum mechanics like this stands up in the end, it does not seem to
me that that would make spatialism true. You may be able to reduce
the inherent motion in space to spatio-temporal geometry, but the
unit-like nature of quantum events will keep them from being
reducible to properties in space. Each quantum event occurs over a
period of time, and since quantum events cannot exist unless the
whole event occurs, to postulate their existence is tantamount to
holding that what exists includes entities with a temporal dimension
to their essential nature. Bits of matter-time may be less
problematic than spacetime, but in a world in which nothing exists
but the present moment, they are, strictly speaking, not possible.
Thus, this unit-like nature can be explained only by postulating the
existence of a substance with a part-whole relationship of some kind
that make it appear to be made up indivisible cycles of events.
Whatever its nature, it basically different from the essential nature
from space. Space is incapable of explaining the unit-like nature of
quantum events, because it must exist only at the present moment in
order to have an inherent motion that flows continuously. The only
plausible way of explaining the all-or-nothing character of quantum
events is to postulate another kind of basic substance, distinct from
space, which can coincide with parts of space, for in that case, we
can believe that, despite seeming to have a temporal dimension to
their nature, quantum events also exist only at the present moment.
There is, however, no need to settle this issue now. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">F<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCLQm_13" align="right" hspace="5" width="125" height="85" border="0">orms
of quantum matter. </font>I will focus first on the nature of quantum
matter, since force-field matter depends on the existence of the bits
of quantum matter constituting a particle with rest mass in nearby
parts of space and it is fairly clear how it can be explained.
Quantum matter includes electromagnetic waves, material objects with
rest mass, and their kinetic energy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
total matter is ultimately equal to the total quantum matter.
Force-field matter is already counted in the masses of the objects
exerting the forces, and gravitational waves eventually die out as
they are converted into other forms of matter. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
quantity of quantum matter in any region of space is measured by the
number of quantum events per unit time, for that is equal to the
quantity of energy, given the definition of “action.” Since we
will assume that all quantum matter is constituted by quantum events,
the equivalence of energy and mass by Einsteins equation, <i>E&nbsp;=&nbsp;mc</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>,
implies that each unit of mass must be equivalent to a certain number
of quantum events per second. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
quantity of force-field matter involved in constituting the electric
charge can be measured as potential energy, that is, in terms of the
number of quantum events per second that can be converted from it,
and that quantity must be subtracted from the total quantum cycles
constituting rest mass. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">After
describing the nature of each form of quantum matter, I will take up
the nature of electromagnetic interactions, bringing force-field
matter back into the picture. But along the way, I will point out how
this theory explains the peculiar nature of matter at the scale of
the quantum and solves certain quantum puzzles. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>L<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAEUAAAAQCAMAAAB3EEJfAAAAYFBMVEXjx5vVu5HHroi4on6qlXSciWqOfGF/cFdxY01jV0MybUFVSjpGPjA4MSYqJR17AABzAABmAAAcGBNMAAA9AAAzAAANDAkAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAKqgzAAAAAiElEQVR4nK3TSQ6AIAwF0AoVahCc9f43tQanjYkU/uIvmvSFpAG6fsgPdFuBlFMgM7eikMvEodHHoBIoSFw6DgmvEikedGhXoNY7GEMjVpziovqotLdsb8VDBKSKQ1S8a+sxKjaBeW5ERMg3ssYDKr5WZU26ckaH8H/5U5Gl5A8oofTDNC+Z2QEK3CmatGOzUwAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==" name="TtsOtkCLQm_14" align="right" hspace="5" width="150" height="34" border="0">ight.
</b></i>Light is the easiest form of matter to explain on the
assumption that “quantum” refers to elementary events with the
size indicated by Plancks constant, for light can be explained as
being made up of photons, each of which is the size of a quantum.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Light
was understood as a wave in classical physics. According to Maxwells
equations for electromagnetism, the change in the electric force has
as its effect a magnetic force, and the change in the magnetic force
has as its effect an electric force. Thus, the two forces interact,
and their interaction can couple them in cycles of changing electric
and magnetic forces that propagate through space at a fixed velocity,
the velocity of light. Its wave-like nature is apparent in such
phenomena as diffraction and interference. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As we
assumed in explaining Einsteinian relativity, the velocity of light
is explained ontologically by the velocity of the motion inherent in
space itself. Let us, therefore, think of the electric and magnetic
forces involved in electromagnetic waves as being carried along with
the inherent motion in some direction. That will allow us to explain
electric and magnetic forces as properties of parts of space, except
for the way that they are coupled together in units as photons (or
rather aspects of the inherent motion in space). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
particle-like nature of light waves can be explained on the
assumption that each cycle of electric and magnetic forces is a
single quantum event that occurs as a whole, if it occurs at all.
Since these quantum events are cyclic, when one event does occur, it
is followed, other things being equal, by another quantum event of
the same kind. But since these quantum events coincide with space by
way of the inherent motion, the next cycle of electric and magnetic
forces occupies the next part of space in its direction. As the
cycles reproduce themselves in time, therefore, they move across
space, constituting an electromagnetic wave in time and space. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This
ontological explanation of light accounts for the quantum equations
used to describe the energy and momentum of photons. Energy is
proportional to the number of quantum cycles per unit time, and that
is what the equation for the photons energy says: <i>E&nbsp;=&nbsp;hf</i>
(where <i>f</i> is the frequency of the light). The shorter the
period of each quantum cycle, the more units of action that can occur
in a unit of time, and thus, the more energy it carries. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
momentum of the photon can be explained in a parallel way, except
relative to the direction of space in which the photon is moving. The
dimensions of the quantum as a unit of action implies that the
momentum of a quantum cycle is proportional to the number of quantum
cycles per unit distance (in the direction of motion), and that is
what the equation for the momentum of the photon says: <i>p&nbsp;=</i>&nbsp;<i>h/</i><font face="Symbol, serif"><i>l</i></font>,
where <font face="Symbol, serif"><i>l</i></font> is the wavelength of
the light and <i>1/</i><font face="Symbol, serif"><i>l</i></font> is
the number of cycles per unit length). In other words, the momentum
is inversely proportional to the wavelength. Photons with shorter
wavelengths have more momentum. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since the
velocity of light is constant, <i>f</i><font face="Symbol, serif"><i>l</i></font>&nbsp;<i>=&nbsp;c
</i>(where <i>c</i> is the velocity of light), and thus, the energy
and momentum of the photon are proportional to one another: <i>E&nbsp;=&nbsp;pc</i>.
In other words, the shorter the photons quantum cycle in time and
space, the higher its energy and momentum, respectively. But since it
is still the size of a quantum, the decreased size of the event in
space and time means that the forces involved in each cycle are
greater (since action is the product of force, space and time). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Since
each cycle of electric and magnetic forces is a quantum event, no
part of it can exist unless the whole cycle does. This unit-like
nature to the events that constitute the existence of a photon is
explained ontologically by how bits of matter coincide with space,
and so it depend as much on the nature of space as it does not the
nature of matter. (More precisely, the energy of the photon depends
on the bit of matter apart from space, whereas its momentum also
depends on space, because momentum is a result of the interaction of
electric and magnetic forces being carried along by the inherent
motion.) This suggests a straightforward ontological explanation of
the phenomena that led to the recognition that light is made up of
particle-like units. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Planck</i>.
What Planck discovered about blackbody radiation can be explained
ontologically as a discovery about how photons coincide with the same
part of space. What he discovered is that photons of different
frequencies can all coincide with the same part of space as long as
there their frequencies differ from one another by at least one
quantum of action per second. This limitation on the frequencies that
can exist in the same part of space avoids the so-called ultraviolet
catastrophe, that is, why the total energy of photons at higher
frequencies does not become infinite. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">On this
ontological explanation, what coincides with space are not just the
changing electric and magnetic forces of electromagnetic waves, but
rather complete cycles of such forces. And since the inherent motion
contains each quantum of action is part of a wave pattern of a
certain size that extends though the space in its direction, this
limitation is a minimum difference that holds for the sizes of the
wave patterns that can exist in that region of space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Though this
is a limitation on the variety of possible photons that can coincide
with any part of space, the inherent motion in space is still
handling a lot of different kinds of photons. In addition to all the
frequencies of light in any direction that can exist at any part of
space, photons of each frequency can have different phases (that is,
different points in space where the cycle begins) as well different
orientations of spin. Not only must the inherent motion be able to
carry photons of all these kinds at once in any given direction, but
it must also be able to carry the complete variety of photons <i>in
every direction </i>in three-dimensional space. Indeed, at any given
location it must be able to carry photons of all kinds <i>both ways
</i>in every direction, and it must do so <i>at every location</i> in
the region of space <i>all the time</i>. That is just how the parts
of space are connected (though the inherent motion itself may be
moving across space and being accelerated in a gravitational field). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Einstein.</i>
Einsteins explanation of the photoelectric effect was that in
order for light to free electrons from matter, the light had to have
a high enough frequency, because the electron had to receive all the
energy it needed to overcome the force binding it to the atom from a
single photon. Lots of low frequency photons would not work. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This
particle-like behavior of light is just what would be expected, if
light is constituted by cycles of quantum events, because in order
for light to interact at all, a whole quantum event of one kind must
become a quantum event of another kind, in this case, it is the kind
of quantum event that constitutes kinetic energy. And a single photon
can supply the force needed to accelerate the electron, because
photons with a higher frequency have smaller temporal and spatial
dimensions and, given that each photon is a quantum of action, the
forces constituting them must be correspondingly greater.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Compton.
</i>When a photon does interact, it is the whole photon that
interacts. When a photon is scattered by an electron, for example, a
whole photon is absorbed and a whole new photon is generated (one
that is 180<sup>o</sup> out of phase with the original). The Compton
effect has a straightforward ontological explanation, because the
scattering of the high energy photon by an electron, like an elastic
collision between two material objects, conserves both energy and
momentum. The mass of the electron limits how much energy and
momentum can be carried away, and that can be confirmed by measuring
the direction and wavelength of the reflected photon. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>R<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCLQm_15" align="right" hspace="5" width="150" height="36" border="0">est
mass. </b></i>Material objects with rest mass are another form of
matter that was recognized in explaining the truth of classical
physics, and our reason for thinking that rest mass is just another
form of the substances that are counted in the principle of the
conservation of energy was the equivalence of mass and energy (<i>E =
mc</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>) entailed by Einsteins special theory of
relativity. But having set aside force-field matter, we are now
explaining those forms of matter as forms of quantum matter, and that
requires us to hold that material objects with rest mass are
constituted by quantum events in some way. And there is an obvious
way to do so. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
rest mass of a particle can be explained as the number of cycles of
quantum rest mass events per second, just as for the energy of
photons. Such quantum cycles would, of course, have to coincide with
space in a different way from photons, because objects with rest mass
can remain at rest (or more precisely, have a constant velocity
relative to the inherent motion in space). The simplest way to
explain why such objects can be at rest is to hold that the quantum
cycles constituting them go around in circles (or some such closed
path), instead of moving across space with the inherent motion like
photons. Moreover, since such quantum events would follow a closed
path, like a circle, which brings the action back to where it began
to start the next cycle, it is clear how quantum rest mass cycles can
succeed one another in time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">In
order to show that objects with rest mass can be explained as form of
quantum matter, it will be necessary to show how all the basic
particles recognized by physics can be explained by quantum rest mass
cycles in this way. But that is a task that will not be taken up
until the next chapter on contemporary physics, </span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/L/LoOtkCaLeCosBasObj.htm" target="Lo"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><span lang="en-US"><u>Cosmology:
Basic Objects</u></span></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">.
For purposes of explaining quantum mechanics proper, we shall need
only three kind of basic particles with rest mass: electrons, protons
and neutrons. They are the near basic constituents of ordinary
material objects of all kinds, and together with the electromagnetic
force, including the photon, they can explain all the processes that
occur in ordinary objects, from atoms to human beings. That is the
range of phenomena covered by the quantum mechanics of
electromagnetism. </span></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">Such
ordinary phenomena do not include, of course, the sun, radioactivity,
nuclear power and the like. These other phenomena depend on
interactions among more basic particles than nucleons and their
electromagnetic interactions with electrons. These more basic
particles are recognized by physics, and they must all be explained
as cycles of quantum events (and how quantum cycles coincide with
space) in order for this ontological explanation of quantum matter to
be complete. There is a way of doing that in which even the electron
does not turn out to be basic, as explained in </span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/L/LoOtkCaLeCosBasObj.htm" target="Lo"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><span lang="en-US"><u>Cosmology:
Basic Objects</u></span></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">.
</span></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">For
the present, we shall simply take it for granted that electrons and
nucleons can be explained ontologically as objects constituted by
quantum rest mass cycles. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Visible
light is made up of photons with frequencies of about 10<sup>15</sup>
cycles per second and energies about a few electron volts. Electrons
have an energy of about one half million electron volts, and thus,
the frequency of its quantum rest mass cycles must be on the order of
10<sup>21</sup> cycles per second. And since protons have a rest mass
about two thousand times that of electrons (or about 938 million
electron volts), the frequency of their quantum rest mass cycles must
be on the order of 10<sup>24</sup> cycles per second. However,
nucleons have a complex structure, and on this ontological
explanation of them, their quantum rest mass cycles do not follow a
circular pathway. It is a more complex pathway that may involve three
or six quantum events to complete. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">Electrons
and protons carry an electric charge, as well as rest mass. The
conservation of electric charge is explained by the gauge field
theory for electromagnetism, and though what I will say about the
electric charge is compatible with that theory, I will not try to
explain it until we take up the basic particles. (See </span></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/L/LoOtkCaLeCosGaugeField.htm" target="Lo"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><span lang="en-US"><u>Change:
Basic Objects: Gauge Field</u></span></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">.)
We shall just take the electric charge for grated. </span></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i><b>K<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCLQm_16" align="right" hspace="5" width="150" height="34" border="0">inetic
Energy. </b></i>The assumption that kinetic energy is a form of
matter was made in order to explain ontologically the basic laws of
classical physics. We explained the principle of the conservation of
mass and energy ontologically by the endurance of material substance,
and that forced us to recognize that kinetic energy is a form of
matter. What needs to be shown here is how kinetic energy matter can
be explained as a form of quantum matter.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
received view is that the motion of a material object is nothing but
its change of location in space over time. But that is not possible
for an ontological explanation of the world that explains change by
the endurance of substances through time, that is, as “real
change,” because it must assume that nothing exists but what exists
at the present moment. However, if nothing exists but the present
moment, material objects are never in motion, and so wherein does its
motion consist? To call motion “instantaneous velocity” is merely
to name what needs to be explained. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus,
ontology must recognize that the motion of objects with rest mass is
not just their change of location over time, but rather is due to
another form of matter that endures through time. That is, we must
think of motion as an additional bit of matter that coincides with
the material object and the part of space where the object is
located. But it is a different form of matter, because it coincides
with space in a way that moves the rest mass along in a certain
direction at a certain rate. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is to
resurrect the notion that inertia is a kind of force that keeps the
object with rest mass moving, and it explains, as we shall see, the
difference between the rest mass of a material object and its
inertial mass. But since heat is known to be the kinetic energy of
material objects at the micro level, it is also, in effect, to
vindicate the notion that heat is a caloric fluid, as we shall see in
explaining <font face="Arial, sans-serif">Material global
regularities</font>. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>De
Broglies equation. </i>Kinetic energy can be explained in terms of
quantum cycles by supposing that there are quantum events that change
the locations of material objects by a certain distance in a certain
time. Newtons first law of motion requires that material objects
in motion continue in motion, and in order to explain why that law is
true, we assumed that kinetic energy matter endures through time like
any other form of material substance. But now we are explaining how
quantum matter endures through time by the cyclic nature of quantum
events, and so we must explain kinetic energy as a series of cyclic
changes, each step of which can exist only as a whole. Let us call
them “quantum kinetic cycles.” They will explain ontologically
the truth of the de Broglie equations for the momentum and kinetic
energy of particles with rest mass, which parallel the equations for
photons.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">De Broglie
first proposed that particles with rest mass have a wave-like nature,
much like photons. His equation, <i>p = h/</i><font face="Symbol, serif"><i>l</i></font>,
which was derived from the equation for photons, described the
momentum of the particle as being inversely proportional to its
wavelength, and that can be explained ontologically by the nature if
the cyclic quantum events that constitute kinetic energy. The
wavelength of the particle can be explained ontologically as the
distance that the quantum kinetic cycle moves the particle during
each kinetic cycle. And we can explain ontologically why the de
Broglie equation is true, if we assume that for a unit mass, the
length of the quantum kinetic cycle in the direction of its motion is
inversely proportional to the momentum of the material object. Like
photons, therefore, momentum is proportional to the number of quantum
kinetic cycles that occur within a unit of space (in the direction of
motion). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Just as the
momentum is related to the spatial dimensions of the quantum events
constituting kinetic energy matter, so the kinetic energy itself is
related to their temporal dimension. The kinetic energy of the
particle is inversely proportional to the period of its quantum
kinetic cycle, so that its kinetic energy would be proportional to
the number of cycles that occur in a unit of time, also like photons.
In this case, <i>E = hf</i>, where <i>f</i> is the frequency of the
kinetic cycle, or the inverse of its temporal size. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In sum, the
faster the particle with rest mass moves, the shorter the distance
covered by each quantum kinetic cycle, and the shorter the period
required for each quantum kinetic cycle that moves it across space.
But since each quantum kinetic cycle is a quantum of action, the
shorter its temporal and spatial dimensions, the stronger the force
that is acting to move the rest mass across space in each cycle, that
is, the more inertia it has. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Quantitative
relationship of momentum and kinetic energy. </i>The cycles of
quantum events that are responsible for the motion of objects with
rest mass explain their momentum and energy, therefore, in much the
same way as the momentum and energy of photons. But there is an
important difference. In photons, there is a constant relationship
between energy and momentum (described by the Einsteinian equation,
<i>E&nbsp;=&nbsp;pc</i>), but no such relationship holds for
particles with rest mass. Unlike photons, rest masses can have
various velocities in any direction, and their momentum and kinetic
energy do not have a constant relationship. On this ontological
explanation, that means that the temporal and spatial dimensions of
the quantum kinetic cycles by which the rest masses change location
in space do not have a constant relationship. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">From the
equations for classical physics, we know that the momentum of a
moving object is proportional to its velocity (<i>p&nbsp;=&nbsp;mv</i>),
while the energy of its motion is proportional to the square of the
velocity (<i>E&nbsp;=&nbsp;½mv</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>), and as
promised when the laws of classical physics were being reduced to
spatiomaterialism, this kinetic theory of matter explains why
momentum and energy are related in this way. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="MomentumKE" align="bottom" width="476" height="252" border="0"></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">To go
faster, a particle with rest mass must have shorter quantum kinetic
cycles in space, because their wavelength varies inversely with
momentum. But with greater speed, therefore, quantum kinetic cycles
carry the particle a shorter distance across space during each
quantum event. In order for the velocity to be higher, the particle
must cover more space in the same length of time, and that means that
the <i>period </i>of each quantum kinetic cycle in time must decrease
even faster than its length decreases in space. In fact, it is only
possible if the <i>period </i>of the quantum kinetic cycle decreases
in proportion to the <i>square </i>of velocity. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">For
example, if the velocity of a unit mass is doubled, the wavelength of
each quantum kinetic cycle is cut in half. But that means that the
period of each quantum kinetic cycle must be one-fourth as long as
the previous quantum kinetic cycles, for otherwise the object will
not travel twice as far in the same period of time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus, the
way kinetic quantum events must fit together in space over time in
order to explain the motion of particles with rest mass explains why
the kinetic energy increases with the square of the velocity, while
momentum increases directly with velocity. It is a result of how the
change in the spatial dimensions of quantum kinetic cycles must
affect their temporal dimensions in order for momentum to be
inversely proportional to their de Broglie wavelength. (And the
reason that the kinetic energy of a particle is not equal to the
frequency of its quantum kinetic cycles, but only half, is that only
half that much energy is required to accelerate a particle to that
“frequency.” More energy is required to accelerate objects at
higher velocities, as we noted in explaining why the gravitational
time dilation varies with altitude in a gravitational field, not with
the strength of the force.)</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Rest
mass. </i>This description of quantum kinetic cycles has assumed that
the particle being moved has one unit of rest mass, but particles of
different kinds have different masses and according to classical
physics the mass of the particle helps determine its momentum. Its
momentum is the product of its mass and velocity. For example, when
two material objects have the same velocity, but one has twice the
mass of the other, the one has twice the momentum and twice the
kinetic energy of the other object. This can be explained
ontologically on the assumption that the particles motion is due
to quantum kinetic cycles, but it will require us to take into
account the relationship between the quantum cycles making up the
rest mass and the quantum cycle constituting its motion. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">We are
assuming that the rest mass of a particle is proportional to the
frequency of the quantum cycles constituting its rest mass. In an
object with twice the rest mass, there are twice as many quantum rest
mass cycles per second. Though rest mass and kinetic energy are both
a series of cycles of quantum events, and though the total matter is
equal to the total of both kinds of quantum cycles per second, they
are different forms of matter and each has an existence that is
distinct from the other. But in order to explain the role of rest
mass in determining momentum, we must assume that the quantum rest
mass cycles determine a scaling factor for quantum kinetic cycles.
For example, when two material objects have the same velocity, but
one has twice as many quantum rest mass cycles as the other, the one
must have quantum kinetic cycles whose wavelengths and periods that
are half the other object. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This
scaling factor would explain why the momentum and kinetic energy of
particles is proportional to the rest mass. But it is only a scaling
factor for the quantum kinetic cycles required to move the object
across space. The period of its rest mass cycles are not changed by
the motion of the particle with rest mass. Quantum kinetic cycles are
additional quantum events whose size depends on how many rest mass
cycles occur during each unit of time as well as how far the object
is moved during each unit of time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Inertial
mass.</i> This is only a first approximation to the explanation of
how the size of the quantum kinetic cycles depend on mass as well as
velocity, because kinetic energy is an additional quantity of matter
that coincides with the object with rest mass and that kinetic matter
must itself be moved along with the object with rest mass. Thus,
since the total number of quantum cycles per second that is being
moved along by the kinetic matter includes both the quantum rest mass
cycles and the quantum kinetic cycles of the objects, the scaling
factor for quantum kinetic cycles must depend not only on the total
rest mass cycles but also on the total quantum kinetic cycles. Let us
call that combined total quantum cycles the “inertial mass” of
the material object, to distinguish it from the rest mass. And let as
refine our ontological explanation of momentum and kinetic energy to
make them proportional to the inertial mass of the material object,
rather than its rest mass.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The rate
for the conversion of matter between mass and energy is given by
Einsteins formula, <i>E&nbsp;=&nbsp;mc</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>, and
the simplest explanation is that it describes the rate at which
additional quantum kinetic cycle contribute to the scaling factor.
That fixes the number of quantum rest mass cycles for each unit of
mass and constrains the explanation of rest mass by quantum cycles. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">[However,
the relationship may be more complex. It is possible that the quantum
rest mass cycles constituting particles have a special nature
(presumably because of how they depend on weakons and neutrinos and
the unique structures that result), and each quantum rest mass cycle
contribute more to total mass than a single quantum kinetic cycles.
Let us proceed, however, on the simple assumption.]</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">[There is,
however, no reason to doubt that the quantum kinetic cycles are
simply added to the quantum rest mass cycles in determining the total
mass (or energy, if you will) of the object. To be sure, the
Einsteinian formula, <i>E</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>&nbsp;<i>=&nbsp;p</i><sup><i>2</i></sup><i>c</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>&nbsp;<i>+&nbsp;m</i><sub><i>o</i></sub><sup><i>2</i></sup><i>c</i><sup><i>4</i></sup>,
suggests that the contributions of rest mass (&nbsp;<i>m</i><sub><i>o</i></sub><sup><i>2</i></sup><i>c</i><sup><i>4</i></sup>)
and the objects motion (<i>p</i><sup><i>2</i></sup><i>c</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>)
to the total energy (<i>E</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>) is more like
orthogonal components of total energy as a vector sum. But this
formula represents the objects motion in terms of its momentum,
that is, its spatial aspect, not its total energy. Energy is the
temporal aspect of the quantum cycle, and both kinds of energy are
included in this total. Furthermore, this equation merely describes
the dynamic invariant that holds among inertial frames corresponding
to the kinematic separation <i>s</i> (where <i>s</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>&nbsp;<i>=&nbsp;c</i><sup><i>2</i></sup><i>t</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>x</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>,
and the parallel is <i>m</i><sub><i>o</i></sub><sup><i>2</i></sup><i>c</i><sup><i>4</i></sup>&nbsp;<i>=&nbsp;E</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>&nbsp;<i>-&nbsp;p</i><sup><i>2</i></sup><i>c</i><sup><i>2</i></sup>).
But on the spatiomaterialist explanation of special theory of
relativity, the tradeoff between total energy and momentum (in the
temporal and spatial dimensions) that makes inertial frames
equivalent in this way is just an appearance. Not only rest mass, but
also the total energy and momentum have absolute values, though they
cannot be determined empirically, that is, measured.]</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">This
ontological explanation of inertial mass would account for the
Lorentz distortion in the masses of material objects with a high
velocity relative to the ether, or what is called the “relativistic
mass increase” (which was promised in </span></font></font></font><a href="/F:/Philosophy/Existentialism/The%20Wholeness%20Of%20the%20World/www.twow.net/Lo/L/LoOtkCaLbStrRelMass.htm" target="Lo"><font color="#0000ff"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2" style="font-size: 10pt"><span lang="en-US"><u>Change:
Special theory of relativity</u></span></font></font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><span lang="en-US">).
The reason that inertial mass increases with velocity is that the
total mass of the material object includes both its rest mass (the
quantum cycles constituting its mass when it is at rest relative to
the inherent motion) and the mass of its kinetic energy (the quantum
kinetic cycles that give the object a velocity relative to the
inherent motion).</span></font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus, not
only is more energy required to accelerate a material object by a
fixed amount at higher velocities relative to the ether because of
the laws of classical physics (with higher velocity the force has to
be applied over a longer distance in the same period of time to
increase its velocity the same way), but more energy is required to
accelerate a material objects by a fixed amount at very high
velocities because of the relativistic mass increase entailed by
Einsteins special theory of relativity (with very high velocities,
the mass of the kinetic energy that must be accelerated along with
its rest mass becomes significant). As the material object approaches
the velocity of light, the mass of the kinetic energy matter (and,
thus, the inertial mass) becomes infinite. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Interference
phenomenon. </i>Finally, this explanation of kinetic energy as a form
of quantum matter affords an explanation of interference phenomena
(and diffraction) with material objects, that is, the phenomenon that
most clearly demonstrates the wave-like nature of particles.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In order
for quantum kinetic cycles to explain the wave-like nature of moving
material objects, we must take into account the role of the inherent
motion. Quantum kinetic cycles move objects with inertial mass
relative to the inherent motion in space, but they are usually much
slower than the motion that sweeps each point both ways in every
direction. Let us assume, therefore, that as that motion sweeps
through a material object in any direction, it picks up the
<i>wavelength</i> of its quantum kinetic cycle and lays out, in the
space beyond it, waves with the same wavelength (until it runs into
another object). Since the wavelength varies inversely with the
product of the inertial mass and velocity, the waves laid out in
space by the inherent motion, in effect, broadcast information about
the particles momentum and phase of its quantum kinetic cycle in
every direction in the ether. (Since the inherent motion flows in all
directions, waves are laid out in all directions indicating its
momentum in each direction, including those opposite to the direction
of the particle itself.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In order to
explain how the inherent motion picks up the wavelength of the
quantum kinetic cycle, we must assume that it interacts with the
quantum kinetic cycle as a whole. It is as if the inherent motion
timed how long it took to pass through the whole kinetic cycle and
laid down a mark in space each time the same period had passed again.
But notice that this period is <i>not </i>the period of the quantum
kinetic cycle itself. The material object takes much longer to cross
the distance covered in a single quantum kinetic cycle than the
motion inherent in space, and thus, the inherent motion will take
many trips across the distance covered by each quantum kinetic cycle
before it is succeeded by another quantum kinetic cycle. This effect
on the inherent motion would not be possible, if the kinetic cycle
did not have a quantum nature, existing as a whole or not at all, for
it must interact with both ends of the path across which the material
object is being moved during each cycle. In other words, the kinetic
energy, which is inversely proportional to the period of the quantum
kinetic cycle, is <i>not </i>broadcast to other regions of space by
the motion inherent in space. Only the momentum is. And that is
fitting, since momentum is the spatial aspect of quantum kinetic
cycles, whereas energy is the temporal aspect. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In order to
explain the interference phenomenon exhibited by objects with
inertial mass in the two-slit experiment, we must recognize that the
inherent motion sweeping through a material object in each direction,
picking up the wavelength of its quantum kinetic cycle, is part of a
wave front. When particles with a certain velocity are moving toward
the barrier with two, closely spaced slits, some particles pass
through, and their collisions with the wall lying beyond the barrier
indicates that the two pathways are interfering with one another like
waves. The particles collide with the distant wall only along certain
fringes, and not between them. This would be just what is expected,
<i>if we assume that the particle tends to move along the path of
waves that have been laid out by the inherent motion</i>. The wave
fronts broadcast by the particle are intercepted by the barrier
except for the two slits. The inherent motion stops laying out
wavelengths in space where it is intercepted by the barrier, but it
continues laying them out where it flows through the slits. Thus, on
the other side of the barrier, there are two wave fronts laying out
the same wavelengths, one emanating from each slit, and they
interfere with one another like light waves. Assuming that the
particle tends to fall in step with the waves that have always
already been laid out in the space between the barrier and the
distance wall, therefore, its path is diverted away from paths on
which the wave fronts interfere destructively toward those paths on
which the wave fronts interfere constructively. That is, the particle
always tends to be where its wave front is strongest. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">If we use
the crude picture of quantum cycles as having a definite starting
point and ending point, we can think of the particle as being
subjected to a force at the completion of each quantum kinetic cycle,
if it finds itself in a position where the waves being laid out from
the two slit are interfering destructively, which changes its
direction slightly. But when it ends a quantum kinetic cycle where
the waves from the two slits interfere constructively, it simply goes
with the flow. Thus, the effect is to channel the particle along a
certain path way. The actual path will vary from particle to particle
with the same momentum depending on the direction its emerges from
the slit it passes through, and so it results in a fringe of more and
less likely points of interception by the distant wall. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In other
words, in both photons and material objects, the cause of
interference phenomena is the inherent motion. In the case of
photons, the inherent motion carrying the relevant wavelength goes
through both slits setting up a pattern of spacetime cells where they
interfere constructively, and the direction of the photon is diverted
slightly in those regions. It is the same in the case of particles
with inertial mass, except that the relevant wavelength is due to the
quantum kinetic cycles of the particle. In both cases, therefore, the
interference phenomena also occurs when particles (photons or objects
with rest mass) are sent through the slits one at a time. It depends
on the geometry of the inherent motion moving in certain directions
laying out a waves of a certain length in space. And in both cases,
if one of the slits is blocked — or even if an apparatus is set up
that can detect which slit a particle goes through — the
interference effects disappear. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Schrödingers
equation.</i> The quantitative adequacy of the wave pattern laid out
by the inherent motion to explain interference and similar quantum
phenomena has already been demonstrated, in effect, by David Bohm
(1993), for this role of the inherent motion is an ontological
explanation of what he calls the “quantum potential.” </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What
happens in these experiments on particles with rest mass can be
described by the Schrödinger wavefunction, and Bohm shows
mathematically how such a wavefunction can be divided into a part
that is due to the causally relevant factors described by classical
physics and another part which he calls the “quantum potential.”
The quantum potential is a rather strange force, because unlike
classical forces, its strength does not decline with distance. The
quantum force can be quite strong, but its casual role does not come
from its strength, but rather from its spatial structure. Bohm
describes the quantum potential as “active information,” for he
assumes that the particle moves with its own energy and momentum,
while the quantum potential merely <i>informs </i>it about how to do
so in detail. The particle has a definite position and momentum at
each moment, but its classically determined path is affected by the
quantum potential that exists along with it. The Schrödinger
wavefunction holds for all particles with the same momentum in the
two-slit experiment, but the effect of the quantum potential on any
particular particle cannot be predicted, because it depends on a
so-called “hidden variable”. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The quantum
potential is the key to Bohms explanation of how the Schrödinger
wavefunction can be understood as referring to a fully deterministic
process, and this ontological explanation of interference phenomena
is an example of how spatiomaterialism would interpret what Bohm
means by the quantum potential. The quantum potential describes the
waves laid out in space by the inherent motion for any relevant
wavelength of kinetic quantum cycles or photons. The effect of the
waves laid out by the inherent motion makes the quantum potential
look like “active information” (or a “pilot wave,” as de
Broglie called it), because the particle follows the nearest path to
its classically determined path in which the waves coming from
various directions reinforce, avoiding those in which they cancel
out. But to explain the quantum potential by the inherent motion is
to disagree with Bohm on one point, for he holds that the quantum
potential is simply a manifestation of a “nonlocality” about what
happens that simply exists in the quantum system and does not depend
on anything traveling across space over time. But on this ontological
theory, it is due to the inherent motion. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">Furthermore,
the inherent motion explanation of the quantum potential makes it
possible to hold that the hidden variable, which determines how any
particular particle is affected by the quantum potential described by
the wavefunction, is the particular phase of its quantum kinetic
cycle. That is, any particular particle has a definite position and
momentum at the beginning and end of its quantum kinetic cycle, and
the Schrödinger wavefunction describes precisely what happens to it
as a result of the quantum potential. But it is not possible to
measure which phase any particular particle has, and since that
wavefunction also describes what happens to all other possible
particles with the same momentum (the complex numbers enable it to
take all the different possible phases into account), the outcome can
be predicted only probabilistically. </span></font></font>
</p>
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