For over a century, modern physics has relied on abstract mathematical constructs—such as curved space-time and point-particles—to describe the universe. While these models are predictive, they fail to provide a tangible mechanical cause. The Push Theory, authored by Dirk Goussey, presents a radical shift in perspective. By redefining the vacuum as a rigid 3D-Matrix composed of Planck-units and re-evaluating physical dimensions (where Mass is Volume L³ and Time is Surface Area L²), this paper demonstrates that gravity, electromagnetism, and relativity are not separate forces, but the direct result of hydraulic pressure and volume displacement within a physical medium. This model successfully reconciles General Relativity with Quantum Mechanics by replacing "spooky action at a distance" with direct mechanical interaction. In this white paper, Dirk Goussey introduces the Push Theory, a comprehensive framework that looks behind the curtain. We move away from the idea that the universe is an empty void governed by magic constants, and instead propose a universe that functions as a high-pressure hydraulic machine. Core Tenets of the Push Theory: • The Medium: The universe is a dense 3D-Matrix of Planck-scale units. • The Actor: Matter consists of 3D Möbius-knots with a minimum structural height of 2 planck lenghts. • The Force: Gravity is not an attraction, but an external Push from the Zero-Point Energy (ZPE) within the Matrix reacting to displaced volumes. The Product: Time is a physical residue (Aₜ) generated by the interaction of volume and displacement, measured in units of surface area. By defining the universe through Pressure and Distance, the Push-theory replaces "Quantum Uncertainty" with Mechanical Determinism. If one knows the pressure state and the grid coordinates of a pixel, the behavior of the system is 100% predictable.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Dirk Goussey (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699010df2ccff479cfe57320 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18621010
Dirk Goussey
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...