Adirian:
It looks like you're blogging here rather than having a discussion.
Maybe you're not saying that Lorentz contraction causes motion at all, but rather you're saying that motion is caused by changing spacetime curvature, or something like that. The problem with that view is that objects appear to move along in flat spacetimes just fine.
It looks like you're blogging here rather than having a discussion.
Lorentz contraction is the apparent shortening of moving objects. How could that cause motion?Moving slightly ahead, if Lorentz Contraction is a geometric change to gravity which gives rise to motion, and there is no inherent "velocity" or "inertia" property in matter, our other three forces must, like gravity, be geometric, in order to impart this geometric change.
Maybe you're not saying that Lorentz contraction causes motion at all, but rather you're saying that motion is caused by changing spacetime curvature, or something like that. The problem with that view is that objects appear to move along in flat spacetimes just fine.
There's no evidence that atoms are black holes, as far as I am aware.Examining the nuclear force, of course, this immediately implies that atoms should be black holes.
Show me your math.All in all, assuming my math is right, a hydrogen atom is around 2.5 meters in diameter, if measured from the inside.