What Gravity Really Is: The Structural Cause Behind Physical Stability Gravity is the single structure shared by atoms, water, rocks, metals, planets and stars — and it has never been defined.
Authors/Creators
Description
This work explains what gravity actually is, why Einstein could not define it, and how generative stability produces the behaviour traditionally interpreted as gravitational.
It develops the generative interpretation introduced in GT 1.0, showing that gravity is not an attractive force, not curvature, and not interaction, but a structural invariant arising from the pruning of unstable transitions. The note clarifies the moment when the first physical object emerges relative to the pre‑physical generative layer (0+, 01), and explains why gravitational behaviour results from coherence preservation rather than physical influence.
The framework presented here positions gravity as a non‑energetic, non‑field, non‑interactive invariant
of generative structure — a stable restriction on possible transitions that centralizes motion without attraction. This provides a coherent, pre‑structural ontology of gravitational phenomena.
Author: Waldemar Superson
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Grawitacja 2.0.pdf
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(91.2 kB)
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Dates
- Created
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2026-06-04