I like RIchard, have his autobiography in my persona library.
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re you asking about Bells theorem, yes I got a epiphany years ago that resolves' this Sorry I had a Stroke a year ago lost ability to walk so lose of feeling is pinky and index finger on left side was a touch typer before slowly improving walking now old hat at this.
This is what I wrote years ago:
Imagine a length, any length approaching zero to approaching infinity. This is the x axis. Now imagine a second length, its only criteria be that it be equal in length to the first length. This is the y axis. These two lengths represent any length in space. If the length is defined as one unit, using Pythagoras theorem the hypotenuse is an irrational number, the square root of two. This length in space must also exist if the other two lengths are absolute, therefore none of the lengths can be absolute. An absolute point cannot exist, only a distribution around a point. For a black hole no singularity just a distribution within the event horizon.
The one current theory the jives with this conjecture is “Loop Quantum Gravity”. Developed in Canada by a Canadian physicist and currently a very strong contender for how every thing works.
Well, many people dream to have such a position at such a young age. He graduated his PhD at 24 and all... He had a lot of priviledge to not face any issues that prohibited him from graduating, he didn't have a burnout for any non-academic reason... The whole video seems to be about that position and how awkward it was and how Oppenheimer helped him.I really like RIchard, so much in common.
Actually, square roots are infinite series. So are other irrational numbers such as e and pi. It's an estimation technique.I was surprised almost 30 years ago why nobody else noticed this length of square root of two must exist as the the circumference of a very large circle actually supports quantum mechanics. So easy to visualize. I guess a substantial IQ only goes so far.
Closest thing I got in my high school math was set theory. I watched a great courses video from Sean Carroll, where he stated point particles do not exist only waves. Also saw Steven Hawking use similar argument to mine to mine. I know Murray Gell-Mann used group theory. When in high school math was easy now with stroke and age not so sure.Pure mathematics is even more discrete (relying on distinct states rather than the concept of a continuum) than physics. Did you have a try at group theory?