Break through in Science: The Universe is a decay
PREAMBLE
Decay theory is a Quantum Physics interpretation of reality being developed by an Independent African Scholar Harry Mangulenje.
It is based on everyday observation and human experience that almost everything in nature, decays.
In this vain decay theory pronounces that the most profound rule of nature is that everything that emerges de-emerges everything that appears disappears, everything that lives dies, everything that exists, unexists, everything is replaced or displaced.
This bubbling process can be understood as the vibration energy that drives and causes motions in all elements in nature.
The universe is a decay-a decayed probability energy.
The universe was born from a probability equilibrium that perturbed and collapsed, according to this theory, still under critical review and not yet accepted universally.
Probability is a higher state while physicality is a lower one.
Reference to this is in Heisenberg uncertainty principle, Nels Bohr, Quantum mechanics ( You can't be certain of finding an electron at a particular location), Erwin Schrödinger the cat being both dead and alive analogy, Quantum many world interpretation.
So, much so that every system in probability equilibrium realm is pre emergent, and is a higher state.
When it collapses it takes a logic position, becomes emergent, assumes that, low state.
After collapsing it goes further low state towards further decay.
However that is not to say, there are no elements that don't decay. But almost everything decays.
One evidence is the speed of galaxies which is attributed to the dark energy. Decay understand dark energy in the spectre of emergence and de emergence of states as the product of probability and its lower partner logic.
Probability collapse to a lower state and becomes logic or defined state.
This is observed everywhere in nature too.
Reference to this is scientific observation in nuclear decay.
CAUSALITY
Causality-Emergence Decay Theory: Probability Equilibrium Disruption and System Formation
Abstract
This theoretical framework integrates causality, emergence, and probability equilibrium.
Causality arises from disruption of nonentity equilibrium, yielding energy conditions forming complex systems.
Implications encompass quantum origins, hierarchical emergence, and causal realism.
INTRODUCTION
Causality and emergence are fund know noamental concepts reexamined through probability equilibrium disruption.
Nonentity equilibrium, perturbed, yields emergent energy conditions.
THEORY OUTLINE
1. Nonentity Equilibrium: Initial probability balance.
2. Disruption: Perturbation triggering emergence.
3. Emergence: Energy conditions form systems.
4. Causality: Emergent property governing interactions.
KEY POSITIONS
1. Causality Emergence: Causality arises from disrupted equilibrium.
2. Hierarchical Emergence: Systems emerge through iterative disruptions.
3. Probability-Driven: Emergence stems from probabilistic fluctuations.
4. Causal Realism: Causality fundamentally shapes reality.
THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS
1. Quantum Origins: Emergence from quantum fluctuations.
2. System Complexity: Hierarchical emergence.
3. Causal Dynamical Triangulation: Compatible quantum gravity framework.
4. Non-equilibrium Thermodynamics: Energetic evolution.
REFERENCES
Here are relevant sources for Causality-Emergence Theory:
PHYSICS AND EMERGENCE
1. Holland, J. H. (1998). Emergence: From Chaos to Order. Addison-Wesley.
2. Kauffman, S. A. (1993). The Origins of Order. Oxford University Press.
3. Deutsch, D. (2011). The Beginning of Infinity. Penguin Books.
Quantum Mechanics and Causality
1. Heisenberg, W. (1927). Über den anschaulichen Inhalt der quantentheoretischen Kinematik und Mechanik*. Zeitschrift für Physik.
2. Dirac, P. A. M. (1927). The Quantum Theory of Emission and Absorption. Proceedings of the Royal Society.
3. Penrose, R. (2004). The Road to Reality. Vintage Books.
Complexity and Systems Science
1. Wolfram, S. (2002). A New Kind of Science. Wolfram Media.
2. Bar-Yam, Y. (1997). Dynamics of Complex Systems. Perseus Books.
3.Bak, P. (1996). How Nature Works Copernicus.
Philosophical Foundations
1. Aristotle. (350 BCE). Metaphysics.
2. Kant, I. (1781). Critique of Pure Reason.
3. Whitehead, A. N. (1929). Process and Reality.
Academic Journals
1. Physical Review X (PRX)
2. Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical
3. Complexity
4. Emergence: Complexity and Organization
ONLINE SOURCES
1. arXiv (quantum physics, complexity)
2. ResearchGate (emergence, complexity)
3. (link unavailable) (philosophy, physics)
PLATFORM SOURCES
1. APA (American Psychological Association)
2. MLA (Modern Language Association)
3. Chicago/Turabian



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