What can we deduce factually about the objective nature of reality (which is internal, external, and everything in between) from the external parameters devised by Schwarzschild in response to Einstein's theories?

Schwarzschild saw Einstien's grandiose ideas, and formulated (in the terms of mathematics) a particular set of circumstances designed to indicate a fundamental truth that Einstein's theory, no matter how extraordinary, could never grasp, blinded by the limit of its own constructed parameters. In other words, Schwarzschild used mathematics to expose an indisputable shortfall in what has been received by the "scientific" community as a purely mathematical theory.

Einstein is famously attributed with the quote:

"God does not play dice with the Universe."

Dice are a human construct.

The reality that governs so-called "dice" is something else entirely.
 
Aug 15, 2024
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I had to look it up, so here's what I found:
The Schwarzschild radius (Rg) of an object of mass M is given by the following formula, in which G is the universal gravitational constant and c is the speed of light: Rg = 2GM/c2.
Didn't help...
 
Apr 23, 2024
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What can we deduce factually about the objective nature of reality (which is internal, external, and everything in between) from the external parameters devised by Schwarzschild in response to Einstein's theories?

Schwarzschild saw Einstien's grandiose ideas, and formulated (in the terms of mathematics) a particular set of circumstances designed to indicate a fundamental truth that Einstein's theory, no matter how extraordinary, could never grasp, blinded by the limit of its own constructed parameters. In other words, Schwarzschild used mathematics to expose an indisputable shortfall in what has been received by the "scientific" community as a purely mathematical theory.

Einstein is famously attributed with the quote:

"God does not play dice with the Universe."

Dice are a human construct.

The reality that governs so-called "dice" is something else entirely.
The fact is that god does play dice as Einstein later realised. One small problem thought, there is no god to actually play dice! However the universe is constantly and everywhere playing dice which is a wonderful thing.
 
The universe does not play. Dice is not chance. Dice is choice. And only living molecules have choice. Only life on Earth has choice. Dice only happens here. Dice is singular, just like life.

The only singularity ever detected.
 
I had to look it up, so here's what I found:
The Schwarzschild radius (Rg) of an object of mass M is given by the following formula, in which G is the universal gravitational constant and c is the speed of light: Rg = 2GM/c2.
Didn't help...
The Schwarzchild Radius is a radius that exists upon sufficiently compressing an object so light cannot escape from within.
 
Aug 15, 2024
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Thank you; couldn't they just do the math and tell us the minimum diameter? Not a mathematician, but the Hubble constant is a tiny, tiny number, yes? Dividing anything by the square of the speed of light; well, it is all going in the wrong direction in my mind. Intuitively, that formula looks like a very small number.
 
Thank you; couldn't they just do the math and tell us the minimum diameter? Not a mathematician, but the Hubble constant is a tiny, tiny number, yes? Dividing anything by the square of the speed of light; well, it is all going in the wrong direction in my mind. Intuitively, that formula looks like a very small number.
I tend to think in terms of 'principle' and only occasionally work through mathematics. Everything has a theoretical Schwartzchild radius. I believe all visible objects have a Schwarzchild radius within their physical boundaries, mostly tiny tiny.
 
Aug 15, 2024
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I tend to think in terms of 'principle' and only occasionally work through mathematics. Everything has a theoretical Schwartzchild radius. I believe all visible objects have a Schwarzchild radius within their physical boundaries, mostly tiny tiny.
According to study.com, "The Schwarzschild radius of the sun is 2.9 km and of the earth is 0.88 cm."
So, yes, extremely tiny!
 

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