Free Web Counter

Cover illustration: Courtesy of ESA, NASA/JPL-Caltech, and Felix Mirabel (French Atomic Energy Commission and Institute for Astronomy and Space Physics/Conicet of Argentina
Powered by WebRing®.
Submit Your Site To The Web's Top 50 Search Engines for Free!
eLibrary - Open Ebooks Directory
If you like this Ebook, please rate it!
@ eLibrary - Open Ebooks Directory
AETHER: The Physicalists' God
by Laurent R. Duchesne
Whether there is an aether or not is finally answered; the Aether is but does not exist until it turns into matter.

This isn't a new theory but a new insight on already existing theories. A freshly synthesized interpretation consistent with already known and well accepted scientific facts. A fresh perspective in which the aether concept is reintroduced in an attempt to reconcile a centuries old notion of wholeness in space and time with actually established scientific paradigms.

This book represents, in a short and informal style, what I have realized after a lifelong quest for proof of wholeness in space and time as a fundamental property of the Universe. It is aimed at a general audience, going from the specialist to the layman, with the hope of further popularizing these deeply philosophical issues.

Publication Date: Jun 7, 2010
ISBN/EAN13: 1438205325 /
9781438205328

About the author:

It has been a journey going from
J.L.Borges' "The Garden of
Bifurcating Paths" to Everett's
Many-worlds Interpretation of
Quantum Mechanics, from the
collective behavior of sardine
scholls and J. Cortazar's eels in
"Prose from the Observatory" to
Bose-Einstein condensates. From
the relativity demonstrated by the
'twins paradox' thought experiment
to the non-locality uncovered by the
EPR (Einstein, Podolsky, Rosen)
experiment. After thoroughly
studying the physics of Nature,
Laurent is convinced that the Aether
is the physical but immaterial
substance from which the Universe
emerged.
Available at:
Paper version:
Digital version:
20% Discount Code: BV23PYJ5 (CreateSpace & Google only)
Search the full text of this book:


Search Books