In this work a very simple model of physical experiential creation is developed and then used to provide a single, consistent, and clear solution to the riddles posed by the phenomena that lie at the heart of quantum physics. By providing a unitary framework for understanding all of these heretofore inexplicable phenomena, this model demonstrates that physical reality is a reality that has to be created in order to be known. What this model also demonstrates is that the way in which physical reality is created is through a specific type of relation that takes place at a level of reality that is more fundamental than the physical level of reality. Understanding that physical reality has to be created in order to be known first makes it possible to recognize the experiential mechanism that produces wave-particle duality. Recognizing that experiential mechanism then makes it possible to identify and define the fundamental limitation that exists in the creation of physical experience that produces quantum uncertainty. Following that, that same experiential mechanism and limitation is then used to explain both the creation and collapse of the wave function, as well as quantum nonlocality. Ultimately, this model of physical experiential creation, by providing a single solution to all of these heretofore insoluble riddles, allows for the unification of classical and quantum physical experiential reality, by demonstrating that the only difference between determinate classical physical reality and indeterminate quantum physical reality lies in the relational conditions under which each of these physical experiential realities is created. What this model also makes clear is that the probability or randomness that is so much a part of quantum theory is not an actual feature of reality, but is only an artifact of the process by which quantum physical reality is created, thereby vindicating Einstein for his never-relinquished view that reality is not fundamentally probabilistic.
This work presents a conceptual model of reality which demonstrates that underlying what we experience as the surface phenomenon of physical reality lies a multileveled geometric relational structure composed of absolutely nothing that has become iteratively and progressively structured in relation to itself as a function of its ongoing movement in relation to itself at the speed of light. What this work also demonstrates is that it is the natural and inevitable functioning and evolution of this underlying reality structure that produces what we experience as the behavior of physical reality in general. Specifically, the model makes clear that the interrelations between space, time, energy, and matter mathematically described by Einstein in his relativity theories all exist as a function of relations which arise and exist naturally both between and within different levels of the reality structure that actually exists where we perceive physical reality to be. Evidence that this way of conceptually modeling reality accurately reflects the way in which reality is actually structured and functions, underlying the surface appearance that is physical experiential reality, is presented by using the model to consistently account for the long-sought-for connection between electromagnetic radiation and gravitation, the actual mechanism underlying gravitational attraction, the identity of the gravitational and inertial forces, and what is actually indicated when we use the term "energy." Ultimately, what this model allows us to understand is that seemingly empty space itself, as well as every form of energy in the Universe, regardless of how that form appears as a physical reality, is actually an interaccommodative binary process composed of some form of absolutely nothing that has become dynamically structured in relation to itself as a function of its ongoing movement in relation to itself at the speed of light.
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