I'd like to explore an idea that might seem far-fetched, but maybe it's worth considering. You know how electricity is generated by changing magnetic fields, and how moving electric current creates a magnetic field? Electric motors and generators work based on these principles.
Gravity, being an attractive force, shares some similarities with magnetism. While magnets have opposite poles, gravity always attracts, never repels. I'm wondering if gravity could be thought of as a "magnetic monopole" - a single, unipolar force.
My tentative questions for the C's would be:
1. Does changing a gravitational field near a "conductor" generate a similar effect to changing a magnetic field, creating a flow of something?
2. If so, do orbiting bodies in space generate this effect, similar to a spinning magnet generating an electric current?
3. If we could generate this effect, does it create a gravitational field, just as an electric current creates a magnetic field?
4. Can gravity have two poles, like magnets, or is it a single, unipolar force?
Just wanted to put it out there for general discussion/criticism/correction.
Also, the C's said that electricity and magnetism etc are merely expressions of gravity. Could the attractive force we call gravity also just be one of those expressions - no closer to the true meaning of gravity than the other forces? In other words, could it be a misnomer to call that force gravity? Their clues suggest gravity is much bigger and more fundamental than any of those forces, which might include "gravity" as we define it?
Gravity, being an attractive force, shares some similarities with magnetism. While magnets have opposite poles, gravity always attracts, never repels. I'm wondering if gravity could be thought of as a "magnetic monopole" - a single, unipolar force.
My tentative questions for the C's would be:
1. Does changing a gravitational field near a "conductor" generate a similar effect to changing a magnetic field, creating a flow of something?
2. If so, do orbiting bodies in space generate this effect, similar to a spinning magnet generating an electric current?
3. If we could generate this effect, does it create a gravitational field, just as an electric current creates a magnetic field?
4. Can gravity have two poles, like magnets, or is it a single, unipolar force?
Just wanted to put it out there for general discussion/criticism/correction.
Also, the C's said that electricity and magnetism etc are merely expressions of gravity. Could the attractive force we call gravity also just be one of those expressions - no closer to the true meaning of gravity than the other forces? In other words, could it be a misnomer to call that force gravity? Their clues suggest gravity is much bigger and more fundamental than any of those forces, which might include "gravity" as we define it?