Mass, Gravitation,
and General Relativity
How to explain Mass and Gravitation
This part explores two fundamental components of the Theory of Everything: mass and gravitation.
Current academic teachings on these subjects are, in many respects, flawed. The evidence? To this day, no one has successfully explained the true origins of mass and gravitation. Nor has anyone established a clear link between these two phenomena - despite their obvious connection. Furthermore, if Einstein’s general relativity is correct, then many interpretations of spacetime curvature are likely mistaken.
unified theory, which is "the Spacetime Model".
Mass and Gravitation: A Unified Perspective
Here’s the proposed explanation:
- Mass and gravitation are, quite logically, two manifestations of a single, unified theory. Their origin lies in the pressure exerted by the curvature of Einstein’s spacetime on physical objects.
- Mass (see the left figure above) arises because this spacetime pressure restricts the object’s freedom of movement.
- Gravitation (see right figure) is not an attractive force, as Newton proposed, but rather a pressure force acting on objects - similar to the concept introduced by Le Sage in 1758. Objects are pushed toward one another by the pressure resulting from spacetime curvature. From an external viewpoint, this pressure appears to behave like attraction.
These mechanisms are surprisingly simple and do not rely on complex constructs such as the Higgs boson. That’s precisely what we’ll uncover in this first part of the Spacetime Model.