Fundamental Force

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Definition

The Fundamental Force (or Fundamental Agent) is the active aspect / expression of the Source of Reality, the causal source of the Existence and the Essence / Form of Reality, pressure toward existence and evolution, pure pressure without form. It is the agent of reification, the fundamental Operator from which all the functional Operators of Reality derive, the engine that empowers the incessant transmutation of the possible, the potential, into the existing, the real, at all levels of Complexity.

It is the fundamental causal Entity that incessantly creates and makes Reality to evolve. The Fundamental Force, acting on the Elementary Field (the passive, variational aspect of the Source), incessantly produces the Elementary Events, the Elementary Action, that represents the most elementary form of Existence. It gives incessantly life to the Process of Formation of Reality, a unitary formative process that from the Source leads to the Forms, from the unity to the Universe in evolution.

Common definition

In physics, a force is any influence that causes an object to undergo a certain change, either concerning its movement, direction, or geometrical construction. In other words, a force is that which can cause an object with mass to change its velocity (which includes to begin moving from a state of rest), i.e., to accelerate, or which can cause a flexible object to deform. Force can also be described by intuitive concepts such as a push or pull. A force has both magnitude and direction, making it a vector quantity. Newton's second law, F = ma, was originally formulated in slightly different, but equivalent terms: the original version states that the net force acting upon an object is equal to the rate at which its momentum changes. (Link to Wikipedia page: Force).

Description

Force Existence

Force Relation

See also

Links to the related sections of the TFNR Paper

Classification