David John Gow
My interests in physics stems from a long held and much wider interest in philosophy and the way we interpret our surrounding universe, and as such I am interested in several areas of research, although more recently I have begun to focus upon philosophies of psychology and using philosophical models to solve problems within physics. I am convinced that the problems of being unable to reconcile gravity with the other three fundamental forces is due to a misinterpretation of the nature of space, energy and matter and the relationships that exist between them, and that the reason why mathematics breaks down at the quantum level during the early universe is a result of this misinterpretation. My prime interest is in trying to look at what causes gravity by analysing the use of the Gravitational constant (G) in Newtonian equations.
More recently, I have devised the concept that String Theorists are actually theorising about the human mind, rather than the environments which the mind subjectively observes. String Theory is, therefore, in my opinion just another form of natural philosophy which should be given no scientific creedence until it can be used to give credible predictions in experiments.
Articles by this Author
Identifying the Gravitational Constant
- By David John Gow
- Published 03/10/2005
- Physics
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<p>This short paper is designed to address the dimensional problem of the value of G being given in Nm<sup>2</sup>kg<sup>2</sup>. It aims to show that the gravitational constant is actually a constant describing the action of two very weak partial forces, namely the partial force exerted by the spatial vacuum upon one mass, and the partial force that the vacuum exerts upon a second mass.</p>

