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Lee Field Valstad

From Natural Philosophy Wiki
Lee Field Valstad
Lee Field Valstad
ResidenceRuidoso Downs, NM, United States
NationalityUSA
Known forTheory of Everything, Indivisibility
Scientific career
FieldsSterogene Bioseperations, Lab Tech

Lee Field Valstad (born 1983) is an American independent theorist from New Mexico known for his self-formulated Theory of Everything and his work on the Unified Field. By his own account he was born on Father's Day 1983 in New Mexico, and his middle name, "Field," reflects the central subject of his work, the Unified Field Theory.

Biography

Valstad grew up in New Mexico and completed high school in Ruidoso, where he took part in student council, drama, and pole vaulting, and reported scoring in the top percentiles nationally in mathematics on the ACT. He received a scholarship to Tulane University, where he studied language and anthropology for one year. He subsequently studied wildlife biology for a semester at Eastern New Mexico University (ENMU) before transferring to the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (New Mexico Tech) in Socorro, where he declared a major in environmental engineering and worked in that department.

Work

Valstad states that his central idea originated during a high-school calculus lecture, when he began to consider the meaning of the expression 1/0. He later developed this into what he calls the Theory of Everything, which he summarizes with the premise that nothing is impossible, including the possibility of exceeding the speed of light. According to his account, the exceeding of the speed of light is what produced the Big Bang.

A related part of his work concerns what he terms the Unified Field Symbol. He argues that the correct symbol of the unified field is not the Vesica Pisces as conventionally defined, but a similar-looking figure he calls the Marriage Symbol. His listed research fields include Sterogene Bioseperations and laboratory technology.

Valstad's ideas are self-published and have not been adopted or reviewed within the mainstream scientific community.

Abstracts

External links