9/20/2023 0 Comments Is space finite but unbounded![]() LaRouche first studied Leibniz’s philosophical and scientific works then, years later, upon discovering Leibniz’s 1671 essay, “Society and Economy,” LaRouche became devoted to elaborating and further developing a Leibnizian notion of physical economy. LaRouche recalls, “This encounter with Leibniz was the most important intellectual experience of my childhood and youth.” Leibnizians, First and AlwaysĮinstein, Planck, and LaRouche were steeped in Leibniz, and the Leibnizian method of hypothesis making, from an early age: Einstein and Planck, because they were schooled in the German philosophical-scientific tradition of their homeland LaRouche, because, at age 12, his paternal grandmother had given him a collection of philosophical tracts that included Leibniz. Such an anti-entropic universal principle is inherent even within the abiotic, supposedly dead, physical universe at large.īut how would a universe defined as finite but unbounded, be significant for such potentials?Īs the first step in investigating the origin of Einstein’s concept, and understanding the concept’s relationship to the theories of Max Planck and Lyndon LaRouche, we must, as background, look to the influence on modern science of the great historical figures, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, of the 17th century, and Bernhard Riemann, of the 19th century. ![]() ![]() 3-Regular readers of EIR have seen Lyndon LaRouche’s references to the complex notion developed by Albert Einstein, that we live in a universe which is “finite but unbounded.” Such a universe, LaRouche has asserted, is ruled by universal physical principles which allow for efficient, least action pathways for the evolution of anti-entropic phenomena, as we see in biological systems, and in human creative mentation.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |