One important idea that was put forth by this convocation keynote address is how complicated effects can derive from more simple fundamental causes.
Being significant to us, one of the issues that cloud our understanding of LENR is what really causes LENR since the cause produces so many emergent consequences. The large number of LENR theories now discussed center on the emergent consequences as LENR cause rather than its most fundamental causation. We do not yet understand quantum mechanics on its most basic level to understand what are its fundamental causation and what is the web of secondary principles that emerges from that most basic causation. Consider Feynman Checkerboard as a Model of Discrete Space-Time http://arxiv.org/html/cs/0607018 Feynman shows how quantum mechanical principles like the limit of the speed of light, the uncertainty principle and relativity derive from the digital nature of the universe. In addition, Xiao-Gang Wen suggests that the richness of EMF phenomena derive from the vacuum being a spin net liquid. I see that both these ideas are emergent from a more fundamental concept that can derive from the vacuum being viewed as a sea of roiling virtual particle creation and destruction with each virtual particle possessed of a randomized spin. The digital nature of the vacuum comes from how the virtual particles (photons as a Majorana particle) space themselves naturally when they are created at a constant average rate with spacing as a result of the random nature of their spins. Magnetic fields are derived from how a real particle changes the spins of the virtual particle that fill the vacuum and the speed of this disturbance in the spins of the virtual particles are where the speed of light comes from. Now with this good start, it is straightforward to work out the remainder of reality as an emergent corporeality. On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 1:27 AM, James Bowery <[email protected]> wrote: > 15 minutes of brilliance before the most important professional society of > the information industry. > > http://player.vimeo.com/video/69961273 >

