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This is a work in progress - all rights reserved.
Copyright © 2006-2012 Anthony Giovia

 

CHAPTER 12 – Ideas and Physical Objects

SECTION A

12.1 - The act of Determination is the act of definition. (2.1)

12.2 - Any Idea, by any act of determination, exists in this Universe. (Definition)

12.3 - The Universe is composed of energy. (11.35)

12.4 - Any idea is composed of energy. (Construction)

12.5 - The Universe is composed of each and every object, definition, dimension and architecture. (11.53)

12.6 - Each and every Object, each and every Dimension, each and every Definition, and each and every Architecture is simultaneously an Object, a Dimension, a Definition, and an Architecture. (6.24)

12.7 - Any idea is simultaneously an object, dimension, definition and architecture. (Construction)

12.8 - The Universe is composed of energy, mass and the constant speed of light. (11.86)

12.9 - E=MC2  is an architecture of direct and indirect relationships among energy, mass, and the constant speed of light. (11.78)

12.10 - Any idea is an architecture of direct and indirect relationships among energy, mass, and the constant speed of light. (Construction)

12.11 - Any idea is an architecture, object, definition, and dimension of direct and indirect relationships among energy, mass, and the constant speed of light. (Construction)

SECTION B

12.12 - The Universe is composed of energy, mass and the constant speed of light. (11.86)

12.13 - The definition of mass includes the definition of matter. (11.13)

12.14 - Matter is an object detectable by the human physical senses of touch, and/or sight, and/or smell, and/or taste, and/or hearing. (11.3)

12.15 – Any object is defined. (4.22)

12.16 - A defined object is composed of defined objects. (2.13)

12.17 - Any Physical Object, in whole or in part, is composed of mass. (Definition)

12.18 - If any Object B partly composes or wholly composes any Object A, then Object B is "Included" in the composition of Object A. (4.38)

12.19 - The definition of any physical object includes the definition of mass. (Construction)

12.20 - Mass is a quantity of matter. (11.5)

12.21 - The definition of any physical object includes the definition of matter. (Construction)

12.22 - Objects, definitions, dimensions and architectures are composed of energy. (11.50)

12.23 - The Universe is a network composed of the network of energy, the network of mass and the network of the constant speed of light. (11.88)

12.24 - The Universe is composed of each and every object, definition, dimension and architecture. (11.53)

12.25 - The network of mass includes each and every physical object. (Construction)

12.26 - The network of matter includes each and every physical object. (Construction)

12.27 - Any physical object is included in the network of mass. (Construction)

12.28 - Any physical object is included in the network of matter. (Construction)

12.29 - The Universe is a network composed of each and every object network, dimension network, definition network and architecture network. (11.65)

12.30 - The network of direct and indirect relationships composing mass includes each and every network of direct and indirect relationships composing matter. (Construction)

12.31 - The network of direct and indirect relationships composing matter includes each and every network of direct and indirect relationships composing a physical object. (Construction)

SECTION C

12.32 - Any idea is an architecture, object, definition, and dimension of direct and indirect relationships among energy, mass, and the constant speed of light. (12.11)

12.33 - If any Object B partly composes or wholly composes any Object A, then Object B is "Included" in the composition of Object A. (4.38)

12.34 - Any idea includes the definition of mass. (Construction)

12.35 - Mass is a quantity of matter. (11.5)

12.36 - Any idea includes the definition of matter. (Construction)

12.37 - The Universe is a network composed of the network of energy, the network of mass and the network of the constant speed of light. (11.88)

12.38 - The Universe is composed of each and every object, definition, dimension and architecture. (11.54)

12.39 - The network of mass includes each and every idea. (Construction)

12.40 - The network of matter includes each and every idea. (Construction)

12.41 - The network of mass includes each and every physical object. (12.25)

12.42 - The network of matter includes each and every physical object. (12.26)

12.43 - Each and every physical object, and each and every idea, is included in the network of mass. (Construction)

12.44 - Each and every physical object, and each and every idea, is included in the network of matter. (Construction)

12.45 - Any Physical Object, in whole or in part, is composed of mass. (12.17)

12.46 - Any idea, in whole or in part, is composed of mass. (Construction)

12.47 - Any idea, in whole or in part, is a physical object. (Construction)

12.48 - A Dimension is any defined component of an object. (4.1)

12.49 - Any idea is a dimension of mass. (Construction)

12.50 - Any idea is a dimension of matter. (Construction)

 

Physical Ideas are the crux of the argument supporting Dimensional Thinking. If we grant that ideas exist in this Universe, and that the Universe is composed of energy, then we must grant that ideas are composed of energy.

Beyond that, our high school physics and chemistry courses teach us that energy “obeys" mathematical laws.  In those contexts "laws" refer to ideas expressed as mathematical equations, such as E=MC2 . This chapter re-defines the idea "obey". When ideas are given a physical dimension, there is no practical distinction between physical objects and the laws that physical objects "obey". It is only the direct and indirect physical relationships between the two that need to be defined.

You may ask why we say a physical object is "in whole or in part" composed of mass. How can a physical object be only "partly" composed of mass? The short answer is that it cannot - all objects in a physical Universe are composed of mass. However, the longer answer is that physical objects are simultaneously also composed of energy and the constant speed of light. Defining physical objects as massive "in whole or in part" requires us to see them in all their aspects, all their dimensions - as mass objects, energy objects and speed of light objects.

The physical relationship between ideas and physical objects may at first be difficult to grasp. We traditionally have considered ideas and equations to be intellectual phenomena that somehow have no physical existence. But once we include ideas and equations into the Universe of physical objects we are no longer using ideas as ethereal abstractions describing physical objects. Instead, ideas are now included in the Grand Design – they are physical networks composed of the very objects that "obey" them. It is a fundamental organization that aligns all the manifestations of energy into a unified vision of a physical Universe.

Our entire focus in this treatise has been to define ideas and equations as physical objects. However, our physical definition does not preclude traditional definitions of ideas. Instead it adds a physical dimension to our existing definitions. Concepts are now physical; thoughts are now physical; definitions themselves are now physical.

Physical laws integrate into all of energy's basic forms - energy, matter and the speed of light. A physical Universe obeying physical laws requires a common relationship among all its objects - all its dimensions - all its definitions - all its architectures. That common relationship is energy, and it is the foundation that provides a dynamic fabric of matter and ideas.

This is a big door. If ideas can be expressed in terms of energy, then ideas can be shown to "obey" physical laws. The dimensional nature of ideas has ramifications for the sciences of logic and mathematics, and the pantheon of other sciences - physics, sociology, linguistics, genetics, psychology, philosophy, and so on - built atop logic and mathematics. Physical ideas are the synergistic articulations composing the architecture and design of human knowledge.

 

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