Fragment
1 Introduction
With some arrogance, I dare to say that the most important part of the foundations of physical reality is now exposed. Some mysteries remain, but these can be clearly described. For me, these mysteries exist because my knowledge of mathematics does not allow me to explain the origin of these mysteries. It is also possible that this mathematics does not yet exist. The foundation of physics can be represented in a single sentence that reflects the structure and behavior of the observable universe. "The universe that manifests itself to researchers is one continuous film of the possible coverages of space with versions of number systems belonging to the associative division rings."
2 Explanation
This short description can be explained by the observation that humans cannot think and communicate about things without providing these things with identification in the form of a name or pointer and a short compact description. The curious thing is that physical reality can function without these limitations. Yet physical reality also appears to have to adhere to strict rules and existing structures. The researchers have come to know these rules and structures to a large extent, and they formulate them in what they call mathematics and physics. Several researchers doubt whether people can discover the calculation rules that physical reality uses. Your writer does not belong to this group.
My arrogance is based on my conviction that those with education at the level of a bachelor in exact sciences mathematics or physics should easily be able to follow the argument given here and check it as desired. With considerably less prior knowledge, a large part of the argument is easy to follow. I have done my best to make as many details as possible freely accessible. Many treated subjects that are accessible on the internet are pointed to by in brackets enumerated URLs. Because formulas scare off many readers, they are housed in separate places. This applies to the calculation rules, the bra-ket procedure of Paul Dirac, and important equations. The formulas are placed in a separate chapter. The formulas have already been published elsewhere. [1]
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