Thank you, Mr. Pichirisu for your comment. While yes, it is similar to metaphysics, it is really a more empirical endeavor, as the equations are specifically applicable to physical phenomena like the radioactive decay of quantum wells, though I do appreciate your insight. The metaphysical applications of phenomenological velocity are philosophically intriguing as we know that language develops our perspective on reality, and we know from quantum mechanics that there is empirical evidence for perception's force on a system. Thus, phenomenological velocity is probably the first real mathematical avenue for really applying metaphysics to physical systems. We are, essentially, bridging metaphysics and quantum mechanics with a novel, linguistic insight. If you'd like hands on access to the specific equations, the works are available here: play.google.com/store/books/series?id=y9XbGwAAABARzM
This is just metaphysics with different words.
Thank you, Mr. Pichirisu for your comment. While yes, it is similar to metaphysics, it is really a more empirical endeavor, as the equations are specifically applicable to physical phenomena like the radioactive decay of quantum wells, though I do appreciate your insight. The metaphysical applications of phenomenological velocity are philosophically intriguing as we know that language develops our perspective on reality, and we know from quantum mechanics that there is empirical evidence for perception's force on a system. Thus, phenomenological velocity is probably the first real mathematical avenue for really applying metaphysics to physical systems. We are, essentially, bridging metaphysics and quantum mechanics with a novel, linguistic insight. If you'd like hands on access to the specific equations, the works are available here: play.google.com/store/books/series?id=y9XbGwAAABARzM
Boooooo ai
I'd like to see real people like you talk about phenomenological velocity. Have you figured it out?