Y-Bias & Angularity: The Dynamics of Self-Organizing Criticality From the Zero Point to Infinity

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Scientific Paper
Title Y-Bias & Angularity: The Dynamics of Self-Organizing Criticality From the Zero Point to Infinity
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Author(s) David G Yurth
Keywords Physics, Model, Big Bang, Self-Organizing Criticality, Fibonacci Series, Mass, Magnetism, Scalar Physics
Published 2006
Journal None
No. of pages 153

Read the full paper here

Abstract

The quest of modern physics has been to develop a model which correctly describes the role and dynamics of the interactions by which Nature works. In order for the model which describes these interactions to be robust, it must not only accommodate phenomena which are known to occur, but must also accommodate all rigorously documented phenomena, predict phenomena which are as-yet undiscovered, and allow for the inclusion of all rigorously observed, impeccably documented, carefully reported data derived from all sources. To be adequate, any universally applicable physical model must also accommodate the contemporaneous interaction between Descartes' 'physical stuff' and 'spirit stuff' with equal cogency. The current model fails to rise to this standard. It is based on a number of fundamentally flawed, incomplete and arbitrarily imposed assumptions. In the 35 years since the Standard Model was improved by the Copenhagen School, the reductionist methodology which typifies scientific research has run up hard against the most daunting of all Nature's mysteries. Experimental results provided by the most powerful microscopes, largest telescopes, fastest linear accelerators and other advanced devices, demonstrate that there is an underlying order in the cosmos which has not yet been understood. The shortcomings of the Standard Model are ameliorated by the application of the rules of Self-Organizing Criticality in complex, open systems [SOC] as integrated with the dynamics described as Y-Bias and Angularity.