The three levels of physics: Fundamental, Quantum, and Classic
VERN BENDER
Matter is a substance that has inertia and occupies physical space.
Individual particles in liquids and gases have no fixed positions and move chaotically.
Particles in all states of matter are in constant motion. Solid particles vibrate only. They have the least amount of energy.
A particle exists for a long time, vibrating on both the quantum and fundamental levels.
Mass is a captive form of wave energy. All particles of matter have kinetic energy. They either vibrate, rotate, or move through space.
Never-before-seen particles come from the fundamental grid.
The observable order of causation is not self-explanatory. The fundamental physics grid contains the answers needed.
Our perception of reality is a subjective, non-material one.
There is something real out there that is independent of the observer.
Everything is energy or energy that is transitioning. Mass is never without its active properties. Observer-dependent reality misses much of the picture. The rest of reality lies just beyond our ken. We can only see the beginnings of reality, but never a reality in its totality. Yesterday’s truth will give way to tomorrow’s truth.
Particles either vibrate, rotate, or move through space.
They produce the laws of nature in triplicate. Triplicates in mass. There are three copies of all matters (identical but heavier). Triplicates in energy (identical, but heavier).
There is a three on one platform of physics:
Fundamental, quantum, and classic. (We can see one, two we can’t).