fluid theory
Posted: Wed Sep 06, 2017 10:09 am
I have been watching modern tv and with these new slowmo HD cameras I have been seeing drag race cars on TV, bend and flex. I began thinking about a simulation called "Rigs and Rods" and I said to myself, do metals behave as chains of rods? I said no, thinking back on Archer's Paradox, I believe metals actually function as a fluid and form wave motions.
Thus it is my hypothesis that all matter in the universe is a fluid and it is only our consciousness which creates the appearance of rigid bodies. Our conscious "frame rate" creates a powerful illusion that rigid bodies exist, when in fact all is fluid. I am wondering if this hypothesis is contradicted by scientific equations or validated.
Furthermore, as a metaphor, mathematics and equations are a sort of "cheat code" in order to bypass reality altogether, it is kind of like a "shortcut" path that goes the opposite way and eventually creates a sort of duplicate mirror world a hollow mannequin of sorts. Mathematics is essentially a metaphor of reality when reality may be an incalculably vast fluid.
In metaphor, the human brain and consciousness can be likened to an order or clockwork surrounded by a storm of ever present fluids at the helm (death), we are the one structured, rigid entity surrounded by fluids and so we liken the world outside us to what's in us, rigid bodies and gear clockwork.
Thus it is my hypothesis that all matter in the universe is a fluid and it is only our consciousness which creates the appearance of rigid bodies. Our conscious "frame rate" creates a powerful illusion that rigid bodies exist, when in fact all is fluid. I am wondering if this hypothesis is contradicted by scientific equations or validated.
Furthermore, as a metaphor, mathematics and equations are a sort of "cheat code" in order to bypass reality altogether, it is kind of like a "shortcut" path that goes the opposite way and eventually creates a sort of duplicate mirror world a hollow mannequin of sorts. Mathematics is essentially a metaphor of reality when reality may be an incalculably vast fluid.
In metaphor, the human brain and consciousness can be likened to an order or clockwork surrounded by a storm of ever present fluids at the helm (death), we are the one structured, rigid entity surrounded by fluids and so we liken the world outside us to what's in us, rigid bodies and gear clockwork.