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Showing posts from May 24, 2025

The Dimensionless Form of Temporal Flow Physics

  The Dimensionless Form of Temporal Flow Physics by John Gavel Date: 5/25/2025 In the ongoing development of Temporal Flow Physics (TFP) , a key step in linking the theory to observable physics—and comparing it to established models like General Relativity and Quantum Field Theory—is casting the entire action in a dimensionless form. This blog explores how the fundamental constants of nature—ℏ, c c , and G G —disappear into the fabric of the theory, and what this means for interpreting the action, metric, and dynamics of flow. Why Make the Action Dimensionless? Every physical theory is governed by an action S S , whose variation yields the field equations. But S S  itself carries units: specifically, units of ℏ. By expressing the entire action in dimensionless form—dividing through by ℏ and rescaling all fields and coordinates—we distill the theory to its pure form , where the structure of interactions is laid bare, unclouded by unit conventions. This process also r...

Causal Flow and CPT Inversion: A Geometric Foundation for Quantum Phenomena

Causal Flow and CPT Inversion: A Geometric Foundation for Quantum Phenomena by John Gavel Core Thesis In Temporal Flow Physics (TFP) , all physical phenomena—including quantum behavior, entanglement, CPT symmetry, and spacetime geometry—emerge from the dynamic interactions of quantized, one-dimensional temporal flows . These flows are fundamental entities; no additional quantum formalism is required. The complete structure of physical reality arises from the geometric, statistical, and causal relations between these temporal flows, as defined by the core principles of TFP. I. Metric Emergence from Flow Correlations and Relations Principle 1 asserts that time and temporal flows are fundamental : the universe consists of discrete, complex-valued 1D temporal flows F i ( t ) F_i(t) , each associated with a node i i i . Principle 2 states that space and geometry emerge from comparisons between flows : spatial relations and metric structure are not primitive but arise from discrete ...