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The Trouble Is...
Forum List | Follow Ups | Post Message | Back to Thread Topics | In Response To Posted by Harvey on July 16, 2004 14:49:13 UTC |
I agree that a physical theory does not require a 'definition' of space. For example, a quantum theory of gravity doesn't necessarily lead to a list of axioms such as what you listed. However, if you have a list of the correct axioms of space, then you should be able to derive the fundamental theories that are missing (e.g., quantum theory of gravity) in our fundamental understanding of the universe. The reason is that space is linked to our understanding of matter, energy, gravitation, time, inflation, virtual pair creation, etc. If you have correctly reduced space by a set of axioms, then your axioms must account for the links that exist with these other issues.
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