Physical Sources

From Evolutionary Knowledge Base
Revision as of 20:11, 26 February 2022 by Paolo (Talk | contribs) (Definition)

Jump to: navigation, search

Definition

Physical Sources are the causal and variational (spatial and temporal) origin of the Physical Events that incessantly form the Physical Reality. Physical Sources, even though they are inseparable unities, always manifest two aspects: an active and a passive side. For convenience, having good in mind that they can’t really exist as separated Physical Entities, only for descriptive purposes and following the common knowledge, we can identify two kinds of (sub-)entities: Physical Agents / Forces and Physical Acted / Fields.

We call them Physical Sources because they represent at the same time the causal and the variational aspects of the creation of existence at every level of Physical Reality.

We can identify only one Primary Source and in infinite number of Derived Physical Sources.

The Primary Source, also called the Source of Reality, is the source of the Elementary Events, the Elementary Action, the most elementary form of "substance", which supports the existence of the whole Reality and the Universe in evolution.

The Derived Physical Sources are Physical Entities that emit, generate, create a more complex form of Physical Events, Physical Action, from the level of the more elementary forms of structures in the Elementary Field to the most complex Physical Forms that make up the Physical Universe. Every Physical Structure of Information, every Physical Form, every Physical System, the whole Physical Universe are Physical Sources, Physical Entities that produce Physical Events, Physical Action.

Everything that exists in the physical domain of Nature, in turn can be seen as a Physical Source. Even if composed by a huge number of parts (Structures, Forms, Systems), every Physical Entity is an individual Physical Source. Its properties and behaviors, at a new and higher level of complexity, emerge from the interaction of the properties and behaviors of its parts. Its properties and behaviors can be seen as collective properties and behaviors.

Common definition

Links to Wikipedia pages:

See also

Links to the related sections of the TFNR Paper

Classification

  • Topic id: '
  • Belongs to the class:
  • Has as instances:
  • Belongs to the groups:
  • Semantic Map: ekm|
  • Semantic Map Test Version: ekmt|