I’ve been following Nassim Haramein’s Resonance Project as close a possible once I learned about his work on a unified field theory of physics. Interestingly though, it does not involve strings or anything like that. The model has specific and testable values.
At the core of Nassim’s ideas is a scaling law of matter, the concept that matter of similar masses tends to cluster together. However, the current model of the proton doesn’t fit to this scaling law. That’s why Nassim demonstrates through a recent paper that the proton is actually a black hole, rewriting the mass, and when he does so, it interestingly fits to the scaling law.
From the paper,
We have presented evidence that the proton may be considered as a Schwarzschild entity and that such a system predicts remarkably well, even under crude approximations utilizing semi-classical mechanics, its interaction time, its radiation emissions, its magnetic moment, and even the origin of the strong force as a gravitational component. We are still examining the fundamental nature of mass, inertia, charge, magnetism, spin and angular momentum in the context of the Haramein- Rauscher solution which considers spacetime torque [2]. These aspects are usually assumed as “given” without a source. Here the coherent structure of the vacuum and its gravitational curvature begin to give us an appropriate accounting of the energies necessary to produce these effects.
The Schwarzschild proton strongly suggests that matter at many scales may be organized by black-holes and black hole-like phenomena and thereby lead to a scale unification of the fundamental forces and matter.
So yeah, what does all this mean? If this model fits reality, it will have quite a few fundamental impacts for the world, not just for the field of physics. First, the theory can describe many of the fundamental properties of matter that have long escaped scientists. Such as, the origin of mass, spin, charge, etc… Reaching even further: it can describe the origin of consciousness as the feedback of information from the vaccuum. That seems like quite a claim to make but I’ll post more on Nassim’s ideas to explain how he makes that conclusion.
I’ll be interested to hear more from the research group.









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