User:Odon Sabo/sandbox

Absolute nothing - physics

This article is to prove the existence, and to define absolute nothing.

Defining absolute nothing; — In comparison to a lemon:

- A lemon is an ellipsoidal yellow fruit with a distinct ‘lemon’ fragrant. Its skin has smooth ridges created by small holes and weighs about 10 oz. It tastes sour.

- Absolute nothing has no shape, not texture, no color, it has no smell nor taste. It has no weight nor mass. It contains no energy, it has no space nor time. Absolute nothing cannot expand, nor collapse, it is neither light nor darkness. Absolute nothing is not evil, nor good simply because it contains none of these qualities.

Absolute nothing has no substance, no energy to think or will. It has no mind or feelings of love or hate.

Absolute nothing is not a void; an emptiness caused by the loss of something because it never contained anything to begin with.

Absolute nothing exists in everything and they are similar in strength and integrity because they are both in a state of being whole and undivided, .. meaning you cannot take nor add a single atom nor the smallest particle to absolute nothing, in the same way as you cannot add or take away a single atom or particle from everything. This is why absolute nothing exists and resides in everything, but not a thing exists in absolute nothing.

Experiment to prove the existence of nothing;

Since we have defined absolute nothing, .. it must exist. We cannot say absolute nothing doesn’t exist, because then we could not have defined it in so many ways. But then, if absolute nothing exists we should be able to do a simple physics experiment to prove the existence of nothing.

what we need:

– A glass full of water

– A piece of paper to put over the glass of water.

We take a glass and fill it with water to the rim. We put the piece of paper over the mouth of the glass full of water. We then carefully hold the paper over the glass with one hand and flip the glass over being careful not to spill the water. Once the glass of water is upside down, we can let go of the paper.

Observation:

The water remains in the glass even though we feel the gravity pulling on it. The paper is not holding the water in the glass, actually the water is pulling/holding the paper up. As long as we don’t let anything go between the paper and the lip of the glass, the nothing that exists between the water and the bottom of the glass, keeping something from replacing nothing, we are observing absolute nothing in its purest form.

Using the laws of physics, let us imagine a wire tied through a hole in the middle of a round disk just above the paper, in the water. We get the wire to hang down through the paper, extending below the glass of water, making sure it is sealed, not allowing anything into the glass to replace/displace absolute nothing. Then tie a scale to the end of the wire where we could add weights on the scale that’s hanging on the wire, to measure the integrity of absolute nothing.

Q. How much weigh do you think that absolute nothing could hold up, a hundred pounds? A thousand pounds? Could it hold up the weight of the earth? (assuming gravity pulling on earth)

A. as long as we don’t let anything in the bottom of the water/glass where nothing is, or as long as we don’t replace/displace absolute nothing with something, the nothing could hold the weight of the entire universe (matter of speaking). As long as we keep anything that exists in the universe from entering the glass and replace absolute nothing, .. no matter what weight, or how much force we exert on the wire below the paper, absolute nothing will not create anything either, it will not change nor alter, so absolute nothing remains absolute nothing under any and every circumstance.

We also know through physics that if we would keep adding more and more weight/force on the wire, the pressure would start shrinking the water towards the bottom of the glass, .. or towards absolute nothing. The more force we put on the wire, let’s say the the weight of the entire universe (matter of speaking), absolute nothing would still remain absolute nothing, but this does not say how tiny our universe would shrink to? (Maybe Einstein’s equation E=MC^2 could answer that?)

Summary:

Absolute nothing is pure for it contains absolutely nothing. It exists because we can define it by our senses, and measure its integrity through a simple experiment.

The numeral ‘0’ is not nothing because it can be borrowed from with a negative number, and then we can add those numbers back to ‘0’ (zero). Zero is more like neutral in comparison of absolute nothing, like space for instance.

Space is not absolute nothing because space contains gravity, light, dark matter and so on, where other objects can move freely. Nothing can exist in absolute nothing, so not a thing can travel in absolute nothing, which includes light.

Absolute nothing exists just like the lemon, it can be defined by smell, taste, size, volume, weight, color and so on; absolute nothing has no smell nor taste, it has no size, color or volume, yet it is there in the bottom of our upside down glass full of water.

You cannot add or take away from absolute nothing, if something is present where absolute nothing should be (between our water and glass), we have displaced it with something

Absolute nothing is not the lack of something/anything, .. because absolute nothing lacks absolutely nothing, .. it is a perfect absolute nothing.

Odon Sabo