--- In TheAoISCT@yahoogroups.com, Jonesalonzo1@... wrote:
>
> ... hkurtrichter@... writes:
> I believe that our emotions, our mind, and our life-force are all
> interrelated at the quantum level, just as you noted, but view them
> as significantly different from each other. ...
>
> Do you think there might be a different type of tachyon for each of
these (3?) fields?
>
Exactly. And more!
Consider this. Physicists know of at least four fundamental forces of
nature; gravity, electromagnetism, and the two nuclear forces.
Each of these forces involve fields of different kinds.
Gravity is a central force field, and I believe it is tachyonic in
nature. I have a saying about it that I use rhetorically whenever I
get the chance. I say: "Gravity is faster-than-light, and is
therefore a tachyonic force". By this I mean that gravity is mediated
by a special kind of tachyon (although mainstream science has it that
there is a spin-2 massless "graviton" traveling at lightspeed).
Then there are the electric and magnetic fields, involving photons, and
which, whcn acting together, comprise an electromagnetic field.
And, of course, there are the nuclear fields, of which the strong
nuclear force is described using fields involving virtual particles
called "gluons", which serve to bind protons and neutrons together in
the nucleus of an atom.
Now, if the implications of Einstein's theory of Special Relativity are
correct about the possible existence of at-least one superluminal
universe coexisting with our standard universe, then that opens up the
possibility of tachyonic analogs of all of these fields (except for
gravity, of course, which is already tachyonic).
Each of these fields naturally accomplishes something different.
So, it is not such a stretch to imagine that other types of tachyonic
fields exist, and that some of these explain certain aspects of our
human physiology, such as the life-force, our emotions, and the inner
workings of the human mind.