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Part 0102 - Teel Properties | ARGUMENT 0102-01PRECEDENTS
- CURRENT PARADIGM: The principal properties of the 24 elementary fermions are mass, spin, and charge.
- 0101-01: That each type of elementary fermion consists of a minimum of two quants.
PARAMETERS
- Consider that the quant is the least substantial object that can currently be assumed to exist.
- Consider that the quant has no selfevident properties.
- Consider that properties of the quant can be inferred using profiling to extrapolate properties out of the elementary fermions.
- Consider that mass is a property common to all 24 elementary fermions.
- Consider that spin is a property common to all 24 elementary fermions.
- Consider that rejectivity is a property common to all 24 elementary fermions.
- Consider that charge is a property common to 18 of the 24 elementary fermions.
REASONING
- Because
mass, spin, and rejectivity are properties common to all 24 elementary
fermions, profiling allows the assumption that they are properties of
the quant.
- Because charge is not a property common to all 24
elementary fermions, profiling does not allow the assumption that it is
a property of the quant.
- Thus quants have mass, spin, and rejectivity and do not have charge.
CONCLUSION
- That every quant has these properties: mass, spin, and rejectivity.
| COMMENTARY: REJECTIVITY
The
Rejectivity Law is that: one object cannot occupy a place in
space and time already occupied by another object of the same type. The
principle underlying the law is a simple one. If rejectivity is a
property of an object (say, an elementary fermion) it will react when
colliding with another. If rejectivity is not a property of the object,
it will not react when colliding with another.
The
Rejectivity Law is not found in the Current Paradigm but it should
be because so many of the Paradigm's presently unresolved
conundrums are immediately resolvable with its use. As things
stand, the nearest the Current Paradigm has to the Rejectivity Law
is the Pauli Exclusion Principle (see Selfproof 0108) but this is narrowly applied and has some way to go.
Slotting
the Rejectivity Law into the Current Paradigm is easy enough but
there must be doubt that it could happen quickly, not least
because a substantial element of the physics community is devoted
to working on hypothetical objects which cannot exist if the
Rejectivity Law is applied.
For more information on Rejectivity see Selfproof 0109.
COMMENTARY: PROFILING
Profiling
is a reasoning technique in which universal facets of the known are
assumed to be facets of the appropriate unknown. It is a technique that
has been formalised over the years and is now beneficially used in many
disciplines and professions. It doesn't appear to be used in
the rigorous sciences and certainly not under the name
"profiling". Nevertheless examples of its use can be
found. Mendeleev's Periodic
Table is profiling in all but name. So is the
Quark Model. Many lesser
examples are there to be found.
| GLOSSARY
- CHARGE:
(1) A fundamental property of the elementary
particles of which matter is made that gives rise to attractive and
repulsive forces. (American Heritage Science Dictionary) (2)
The electric charge of an object. The charge of an object can be
positive or negative.
- MASS: Mass is a property of
a physical body which determines the strength of its mutual
gravitational attraction to other bodies and its resistance to being
accelerated by a force.
- PROFILING: A
reasoning technique, much used in medicine, psychology, crime
investigation and Management Study, among others, whereby universal
facets of the known are assumed to be facets of the appropriate
unknown.
- REJECTIVITY: A consequence of the
law: one object cannot occupy a place in space and time already
occupied by another object of the same type.
- SPIN:
The rotation of an object about its axis. An intrinsic
form of angular momentum carried by elementary particles, composite
particles, and atomic nuclei.
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