Field Operative Project Management

Information Systems Improvement

News

Project Management & Revolutionary Physics Research Project

We as a species literally do not know where we are located dimensionally. Just as ancient observers assumed they were located at the spatial center of the universe, modern researchers assume that the surroundings we see, of distance, time, matter, and forces, are fundamentally central to the existing universe, building spectacularly successful theories and mathematical models to explain everything from an electron orbiting an atomic nucleus to the birth of galaxies.

Despite being the most advanced and powerfully predictive ideas in human history, pernicious anomalies are forcing researchers to postulate extra dimensions, strings, dark energy, and dark matter as ways to name the unknown causes of observations that make no sense, or should actually be impossible if the commonly understood models and theories are correct.

This kind of problem has been faced before, and the revolutionary ideas that resolved the difficulties were based on rejection of one or more assumptions, typically biased toward, in the case of measuring position: the observer is in a unique central location. Currently prevailing models assume that space-time dimensions with which we are familiar are similarly fundamental and "central".  While natural to our senses, conceptual frameworks of existence, and built deeply into current cosmology, this assumption appears unlikely from a historical perspective.

While it is clear that the spatial reality we perceive with our eyes, ears, and touch, and the temporal reality we perceive with through our memory is some dimensional manifold, there is no reason to assume that this manifold is located anywhere near the most basic dimensional domains.

Recognizing that such an error is likely to be the root cause of the kind of intractable anomalies we currently face, our research project will explore and develop specifications for the least complicated domain configurations might give rise to our perceptions of space, time, force, and matter, along with best practices for managing research projects of this type.

The hypothesized domain configurations will include potential experimental avenues for falsification, and elimination of candidate models that are not viable, and the management knowledge will include research specific extensions of the latest best practices in project management.

If successful, this endeavor could enable a repositioning of our universe as radically as the Copernican Revolution did half a millennium ago.