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Trinity: The Scientific Basis of Vitalism and Transcendentalism

Stephen P. Smith

Abstract


Albert Einstein said that "the most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is at all comprehensible." Law given as an action that is found within a symmetry implies nothing about an absolute determinism (or causation). Rather, the law is held together by a middle-term that marries the forward presentation to its reception. Symmetry is like a mirror, and the action is balanced enough to become a law. However, when Smith notes that the middle-term is ineffable he brakes strongly away from Platonic strictures that never change. The "law" of nature reveals an action that is imbedded on a symmetry, and (in one example) the photon as messenger particle touches the time-less. Einstein`s riddle is solved. The world is comprehensible because we had to feel its laws, and this truism is comprehensible. It could be no other way! You can find this book at Amazon: Trinity: The Scientific Basis of Vitalism and Transcendentalism.


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