SIMPLE RELATIVITY   -  Introduction



This section introduces a revolutionary new, but extremely simple, concept of relativity based on three primary realities:

Every specific location (a location may be an imaginary point, some specific object, or one specific person) has a unique state of relativity to every other location during the current instant of time.

The three dimensions named distance, time, and force are imaginary (mathematical) representations about one identical state of current relativity.

Every instantaneous state of universal relativity should be treated as uniquely independent and separate from every other instantaneous state of universal relativity. Time is not a reality unto itself, but simply a technique we use to reference various states of instantaneous relativity - similar to a 'page number' in a novel. The point refered to by the word 'time' may relate to the current (real) instantaneous state of relativity, or to some (imagined) prior or future instantaneous state of relativity. Time does not 'flow', and the concept of a time 'duration' is purely mathematical imagination.

The key difference between the currently accepted concept of relativity, and this new concept is that it is not the number of   'pre-defined units' of distance, time, and mass which are affected by relative velocity, but rather it is the definitions of 'relative units' of distance, time and force which are relative to the instantaneous separation distance and state of motion between the reference locations of current interest.

This new concept of relativity in no way affects man's physical perceiptions, nor does it negate the imaginary mathematical techniques and definitions which have previously been created by man. It is only the imaginary values which result from those currently accepted (imaginary) mathematical techniques and equations which are affected.

And that affect is such that all that man can perceive, and all that physical science has proven by prior experiment can be related in terms of boolean values of zero (indicating a current state of irrelevance) and the value of one (indicating a current state of existing relativity).

Realization of this concept opens the doors and removes the veils currently clouding man's understanding of not only 'how' nature works - but more importantly - 'why' she works in the manner that man perceives.


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