On Jul 14, 2:04 pm, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Other forces can balance each other out.
Gravity does not have this counter reaction.
Sure it does. The Big Bang itself.
Gravitation and the BB constitute a natural dipole sharing a common
'ground state'. Whether you view it as a cyclical, 'oscillating'
process as Henry Warren does (see-
www.olypen.com/hcwarren/ ), or as
the Continuous Big Bang of Wolter's model, gravitation and the BB are
starkly apparent as two sides of the same coin.
What 'ground state' does the stuff of space erupt from in the Big
Bang? What 'ground state' does the stuff of space 'go to' in the
process of gravitation? Logic and Occam's Razor would dictate that
it's the *same* nonlocal domain/state common to both.
BTW, one thing Wolter brought to the table was emphasis on the
enormous
hydrodynamic pressure of the spatial medium, sufficient to drive the
flow of space into the core of every atomic nucleus. With that in
mind, try to conceptualize the pressurization that compacts the primal
entity that erupts as the BB (and perpetually powers the Continuous
BB). oc