Difference between revisions of "Physical Agents / Forces"

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(Definition)
(Description)
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In the physical domain of Reality we can find:
 
In the physical domain of Reality we can find:
*[[Derived Agents]]
+
*[[Derived Physical Forces |Derived Agents]]
 
**[[Quantum Agents]] (waves, particles, interactions)
 
**[[Quantum Agents]] (waves, particles, interactions)
 
**[[Deterministic Agents]] (material forms)
 
**[[Deterministic Agents]] (material forms)

Revision as of 20:24, 5 March 2022

Definition

Physical Agents / Forces are the active aspects of the unity represented by Sources.

They are the active side of Physical Reality, of Physical Existence. Physical Agents are the physical forces that act in the formation, the Physical Creation and Physical Evolution of Physical Reality.

In other words, Physical Agents are the fundamental causal entities that give life to, that incessantly produce the construction of Physical Reality. They represent "centers of causal action" in the physical domain of Nature.

Physical Reality is at the same time the result of the Action of the Agents of Reality, Physical Forces derived by the Fundamental Force, which operate within the Process of Formation of the Physical Reality, and at the same time it is the set of all the Physical Forms, which in turn can be seen as Derived Agents, entities expressing Elementary Action, centers of causal action.

Common definition

Links to Wikipedia pages:

Description

We distinguish a fundamental agent (the Force, the Cause, the engine of the Creation and Evolution of Reality) and its functional manifestations/characterizations (the Operators of Reality, the fundamental causal entities that act the Process of Formation of Reality, that empower, construct, give life to Reality) from the derived agents, the manifestations of the Force on the different planes of existence, the forces operating in the physical and cognitive universe.

In the physical domain of Reality we can find:

See also

Links to the related sections of the TFNR Paper

Classification