Chapter XII
Rotational Vibration
As brought out in Chapter IX, the addition of thermal
or other translational motion to the compound units shown on Chart B.
atoms and sub-atomic particles, gives these units some new behavior characteristics
and a whole new set of propertiesthermal and mechanicalemerges.
But the nature of the changes that occur when the atom or particle acquires
a translational motion is, in a sense, rather superficial, and the unit
is still customarily regarded as the same kind of an entity whether or
not it possesses motion of this kind. An atom in motion is simply a moving
atom; it is not given any new name.
This is true of translational motion in general. It does
not modify the behavior of the unit to which it is applied enough to justify
considering the unit in motion as a unit of a different kind. In expanding
Chart B we will therefore omit any reference to addition of translational
motion. There is, however, a second kind of rotational motion which can
be superimposed on the compound units previously discussed, and which
will modify the properties of those units to such a degree that the products
may be considered as belonging in a new category or, at least, a new subdivision
of the original category. The motion which produces these results is rotational
motion that periodically reverses direction; that is, rotational vibration.
Motion of this type plays only a relatively minor role
in our ordinary experience. The escapement of a watch is an example with
which we are all familiar, and many other mechanical devices include parts
with a rocking motion of one kind or another but, in general,
there is not enough difference between rotational and linear oscillations
in such applications to justify making any special distinction between
the two. At the level of atoms and particles, however, the effects of
a rotational vibration are altogether different from those of a linear
vibration. The reason is that the atom or particle is basically a rotating
unit. The result of adding linear translation or vibration, motion of
a different nature, is to move the rotating unit, but rotational
vibration is motion of the same kind as that which constitutes the basic
structure of the unit to which it is applied, hence the result of adding
rotational vibration is to modify the rotating unit.
In the detailed study of the rotational motion of the
atoms of matter previously published it was shown that the three-dimensional
rotation actually consists of a two-dimensional rotation and an oppositely
directed one-dimensional rotation. The rotational vibration, which must
necessarily oppose the rotation, may therefore be either one-dimensional
or two-dimensional. The one-dimensional rotational vibration that exists
in the theoretical RS universe can be identified with the physical phenomenon
known as an electric charge. Such charges are easily produced in
almost any kind of matter or subatomic particle and can be detached from
these units with equal ease. In a low temperature environment such as
that on the surface of the earth the electric charge therefore plays the
part of a temporary appendage to the relatively permanent systems of rotating
motion.
This view of the role of the electric charge in the physical
universe which we derive by development of the consequences of the postulates
of the Reciprocal System is, of course, a far cry from the prevailing
opinion at present, which regards the charge as the very essence of all
material things. Almost all the phenomena we see around us in nature
are based upon electric forces and their effects,112 we are told.
But the amazing thing about this extraordinary glorification
of the electric charge is that when we inquire into the particulars of
the commanding position which the charge is supposed to occupy, we find
that all of the really significant functions ascribed to the electric
charge are those of hypothetical charges which cannot be detected
by any direct means and which, if they exist as postulated, can exist
only in defiance of the physical laws that the observed charges follow
unfailingly. The electric charges that are known to exist participate
in some interesting and important phenomena, to be sure, but not anything
of a basic nature. Even the author of the statement quoted in the preceding
paragraph admits, almost in the same breath, that we cannot detect any
major effects of electric forces by direct observation. We find them only
in theory. It is the purely hypothetical charges that are
supposed to determine the structure of the atom; it is the purely hypothetical
charges that are supposed to account for the cohesion of solids and liquids;
and it is the purely hypothetical charges that are supposed to
constitute the electric current.
In no case is there any tangible evidence of the presence
of these postulated charges. The atom is electrically neutral, so far
as we can determine; the solid aggregate is unquestionably neutral and,
except for minor and incidental effects, a conductor carrying a current
is likewise neutral. In order to give the charge hypothesis any plausibility
at all it is necessary to explain the observed neutral conditions by the
assumption that there are equal numbers of positive and negative charges
present in the atom, in the solid, and in the conductor, and that the
effects of these oppositely directed charges neutralize each other, although
observation of the known charges shows that when charges of opposite
polarity are brought into close proximity they do not neutralize each
others effects, they destroy each other.
Furthermore, there is additional evidence available
in each case to further strengthen the conclusion that naturally follows
from the foregoing: the conclusion that the hypothetical charges are nonexistent.
As pointed out in the preceding chapter, an electric current can easily
be distinguished from a flow of static charges, and since the latter are
known to be charged particles, this establishes a prima facie case in
favor of the contention that the mobile units which constitute the electric
current are not charged particles. The conflicts between the nuclear
atom theory and established physical principles are notorious, and almost
every behavior characteristic of the known electric charge must be repudiated
in order to entertain the hypothesis that the atom is constructed of charged
particles. The electrical theory of solid and liquid cohesion is an even
more astonishing collection of contradictions and inconsistencies, many
of which have been discussed earlier in this volume or in preceding volumes
of this series.
On considering this situation as it now stands, without
taking the historical development into account, it seems incredible that
a hypothetical system so internally inconsistent and so definitely in
conflict with known facts and established physical principles should be
so generally accepted by the scientific community. If we ask the specific
question, Do these hypothetical charges actually exist?, the answer on
the basis of the evidence now available must necessarily be a resounding
No! Strenuous efforts by successive generations of physicists have
produced some impressive mathematical correlations between theory
and experiment, it is true, but, as emphasized in Chapter III, mathematical
agreement is no guarantee of conceptual validity, and these mathematical
successes do not in any way offset the miserable performance of the charge
hypothesis from the conceptual standpoint.
Why, then, has this hypothesis achieved such virtually
unanimous acceptance, not only in one, but in all three of these
applications? Some of the items that were discussed earlier in this presentation,
such as lack of recognition of the limitations of mathematical methods,
failure to realize that it is the shortcomings of a theory rather than
its good points that render the ultimate verdict on its validity, and
the like, must take their share of the blame, but the principal reason
why the negative answer to the question as to the validity of the charge
hypothesis has not appeared is that the question itself has not been asked.
What has happened is that the physicists have been unable to find any
other force capable of producing the observed effects and consequently
the electrical hypothesis has never been seriously challenged. As the
physicists see the picture, the choice is between electrical, magnetic,
and gravitational forces. The gravitational force is too weak, and there
are a number of reasons why magnetism must be ruled out. It has seemed,
therefore, that the observed phenomena must be attributed to electrical
charges, notwithstanding the many indications to the contrary. Consequently,
the contradictions and inconsistencies that are so common in existing
theory are not currently regarded as casting any doubt upon the validity
of the electrical theory per se, but merely as defects in the formulation
of the theory which presumably will be corrected item by item as scientific
knowledge advances.
The emergence of a new theoretical system in which electric
charges play no part at all in any of the three phenomena discussed in
the preceding paragraphsthe structure of the atom, the new theory
of which was presented in Chnapters VI and VII, the electric current (Chapter
XI) and the cohesion of solids and liquids (Chapter IX)now places
the whole situation in an entirely different light. The question now becomes,
Which of these theories, the electrical or the non-electrical, is supported
by the evidence from experiment and observation? Once this question is
asked and the issue is squarely faced, there can be no doubt as to the
answer. There is no direct evidence indicating that electric charges take
part in these phenomenaany conclusion to that effect is merely inference
or supposition based on indirect considerationswhereas there is
much direct evidence to the contrary.
However reluctant the scientific profession may be to
discard a theory (or more accurately, three separate theories,
since the three applications which we have been discussing have no common
denominator other than the hypothetical electric charge on which all are
based) that is so far-reaching and that represents so much time and effort
on the part of so many people, this theory is no longer tenable. The only
real justification for retaining it after its foundations were destroyed
by advances in experimental knowledge has been the lack of any alternative,
and when such an alternative appears, as it now has, this justification
automatically vanishes.
In beginning a survey of the principal characteristics
and effects of electric charges as they exist in the theoretical RS universe,
and hence, because of the demonstrated identity between the RS universe
and the actual physical universe, exist in the latter as well, we note
first that these charges are particularly easy to produce in the subatomic
particles that rotate in only one dimensionthe electron and the
positronand these particles are therefore the most familiar kind
of charged objects. The association of electron, and charge
in scientific thought has, in fact, been so close that existing physical
and chemical theory has been developed on the assumption that the common
negative charge rests solely in the electron and that any such
charge that may be observed in any other body is due to the presence of
electrons within that body. Even the positive charges on atoms or atomic
groups are explained on the assumption that the neutral atom or group
possesses a specific number of electrons and that it is a deficiency in
this number due to loss of one or more electrons that manifests itself
as a positive electric charge.
The relatively recent discovery of the positron, a particle
identical with the electron except in polarity, has struck a devastating
blow at the foundations of this hypothesis. Physicists are understandably
reluctant to recognize the havoc that this discovery has caused in their
theories and they are making every effort to reconcile the positron with
existing ideas in one way or another. One current hypothesis, for instance,
is that this particle constitutes a hole in the general space-time
structure. But such hypotheses as this are actually nothing more than
alternate ways of expressing the observed fact that the positron is simply
the mirror image of the electron. Unless some sound theoretical basis
for a distinction between the two can be produced, it is evident that
the positron should have the same sort of properties as the electron,
and the great differences between the two that are disclosed by observation
therefore constitute an anomaly for which present-day theory has no explanation.
Prior to the discovery of the positron it had been understood
that the positive counterpart of the negative charge of the observed electron
was the positive charge on the proton, an entity defined as
the nucleus of the hydrogen atom, and there was a great deal
of speculation as to the reason for the lack of symmetry between the proton
and the electron, speculation which is now seen to have been meaningless,
since these are actually entities of a quite different character and there
is no reason why they should be symmetrical. But even though this point
has been clarified, the original erroneous concept of the relation of
proton to electron still survives in the nuclear theory of the atom.
The observed is a hydrogen atom carrying a positive
electric charge equal in magnitude to the negative charge on the electron.
The observations give us no indication, however, as to whether the proton
is formed by the addition of a positive charge to the hydrogen
atom or by removal of a negative charge from that atom. When the
nuclear theory was originally formulated the only mobile charges that
were known were negative, and hence the removal hypothesis was the natural
one at that time. Discovery of the positron has destroyed the force of
the original argument and it is now evident that the identification of
the observed proton as the nucleus of the hydrogen atom is
purely hypothetical. Development of the Reciprocal System goes a step
farther and shows that this hypothesis is erroneous.
In the RS universe the electron is an uncharged particle
with a displacement in space. It is capable of acquiring a rotational
vibration, or charge, in time: a negative charge, as customarily designated.
The positron is an uncharged particle with a displacement in time, and
is therefore capable of acquiring a rotational vibration, or charge, in
space: a positive charge. The atomany material atomis an uncharged
compound system of motions with a net displacement in time, hence, like
the positron, it is capable of acquiring a rotational vibration, or charge,
in space: a positive charge.
The charge on the atom is a motion of the atom,
not something that results from attachment or detachment of mobile charges.
A proton is not a hydrogen nucleus; it is a hydrogen atom
with an added vibrational motion. An alpha particle is not a helium
nucleus; it is a helium atom with two units of charge; that is,
two units of rotational vibration. A sodium ion is not a sodium atom that
has lost an electron; it is a sodium atom with an added vibrational motion,
all charges originate in exactly the same manner that the charge
on the electron originates: by addition of a rotational vibration to an
existing rotational motion of the opposite space-time direction.
The lack of symmetry between the properties of positive
and negative charges in the material universe is not due to anything inherent
in the charges, but to the nature of matter. Positrons are rare in the
material environment because in the uncharged state they are single units
of time displacement and, as such, are readily absorbed into the structure
of the material atoms, whereas the ability of these atoms to utilize electrons
is severely limited. Positive ions, however, are more common than negative
ions, particularly if we consider the material universe as a whole, because
an atom of any element can acquire a positive charge, since the net rotational
displacement of any material atom is in time, but only a relatively small
number of elements can form negative ions, as only a few of them have
the one-dimensional rotational space displacement that is necessary for
the acquisition of a negative charge.
Mechanical principles indicate that in order to produce
a rotational motion, either unidirectional or vibratory, by means of linear
forces, a force couple is necessary. Where the couple is provided by interaction
between an electron and an atom of a solid conductor, the atom is not
as readily moved as the electron and it may or may not acquire a charge,
depending on the circumstances. Where the couple is provided by interaction
between two atoms or small atomic groups, as in a liquid or gas, both
of the interacting units are free to rotate and are approximately equal
in size, hence both acquire charges. The directions of these charges are
opposite, and at low ionization levels liquid or gaseous ions are therefore
usually produced as ion pairs.
Although gaseous ions are more important in the universe
as a wholemost of the gaseous matter in the stars and much of that
in inter-stellar space is ionizedliquid ionization is a familiar
feature of our local environment, and observation of ionization and related
processes in solutions has furnished the background, unfortunately an
erroneous background, for a large part of present-day atomic and electrical
theory. The most serious mistake that was made in the interpretation of
these observations was to conclude that ionization is a process of separation
of the molecule into previously existing charged components. Like the
equally erroneous conclusion that charges in general are due to excess
or deficiency of electrons, this was a reasonable supposition in the light
of the limited amount of knowledge about ionization and related phenomena
that existed at the time, but the consequences of an error are none the
less serious if the error is excusable.
The key piece of information that was lacking when the
basic ideas in this area were being formulated is the fact that electric
charges are easily created and easily destroyed. Today the
assertion that the electrons, which emanate from a disintegrating atom,
were not present as such in the intact atom but were created in the process
of disintegration is accepted without demur, since the creation of such
particles is now commonplace. But such an idea was wholly foreign to the
thinking of Faraday and his contemporaries, and they felt perfectly safe
in assuming that if electrons emanate from a radioactive atom they must
have been present in the original atom, and similarly that if a molecule
separates into ions in solution, it must have existed as an association
of such ions before solution took place. The emergence of a new physical
theory now brings into focus a point which, by this time, should have
been recognized in any event; that is, the advance of experimental knowledge
has dealt just as harshly with the nineteenth century theory of ionization
as with the nineteenth century theory of radioactive disintegration. In
both cases it is now clear that the charges have no prior existence; they
are created in the process.
Identification of the process of solution as the point
at which the charges are created eliminates the major problems that confront
existing theory. One important point is that it provides an agency, the
thermal energy of the liquid, that is adequate to account for the action
which takes place. As pointed out in Chapter VIII, the currently accepted
electrical theory of the cohesion of matter is singularly lacking in plausible
explanations for the processes which it postulates, and one of the issues
on which this theory is particularly vague and confused is how the ions
originate in the first place.
There has been an attempt to devise an explanation based
on a hypothetical tendency for the atoms to assume a structure similar
to that of the inert gases; that is, it is postulated that chlorine which,
according to the electrical theory, has 17 orbital electrons, tends to
gain another in order to attain the argon value 18, whereas sodium, which
is presumed to contain 11 such electrons, tends to eject one in order
to reach the neon value 10. This hypothesis has a ring of plausibility
as long as we confine our attention to compounds of the NaCl type, but
these are relatively few in number, and as soon as we turn to other kinds
of compounds the theory breaks down. The hypothetical loss of two electrons
from the positive components of FeCl2,
CuCl2, or ZnCl2,
for instance, leaves us with 25, 27, and 28 electrons respectively, none
of which is anywhere near the inert gas values 18 or 36. To get around
this difficulty the theorists have executed one of the most amazing scientific
maneuvers ever recorded.
In order to appreciate just what has taken place, let
us bear in mind that the basic premise of the electrical theory,
or electronic theory, as it is now more often called, because of the change
in thinking that we are now discussing, is that the cohesion of solids
and liquids is due to the electrostatic forces between oppositely charged
components of these structures. When this basic premise is accepted it
then becomes necessary to find some explanation of the origin of the charges,
inasmuch as the atoms of matter, in their normal states, are not charged.
The concept of gain or loss of electrons by virtue of a hypothetical tendency
to attain the inert gas (or some other particularly stable) electronic
pattern was invented for this purpose. It is thus what we may call an
auxiliary premise, one which is not directly involved in the cohesion
hypothesis, but is directed at a collateral issue raised by that hypothesis.
The electronic pattern does not explain the cohesion; it merely offers
an explanation of the origin of the hypothetical ions whose electrostatic
attraction is assumed to account for the cohesive force.
But somewhere along the line the theorists have lost
sight of their objective. They have forgotten that the electronic pattern
is only a means to an endto provide some justification for the hypothesis
that a solid aggregate is composed of positively and negatively charged
constituentsand they have come to look upon the electronic pattern
as an end in itself. Then, since the original objective imposed some restrictions
on the kind of assumptions that could be made concerning the electronic
pattern and interfered with free exercise of the imagination in fitting
that pattern to the observed behavior of matter they have blithely jettisoned
their original premise, and now explain most compounds by the concepts
of covalent bonds, hydrogen bonds, etc., which
provide no oppositely charged components. It is apparent,
says a textbook, that covalence cannot properly be classified as
positive or negative.113 This is equivalent to removing
the first floor of a building and leaving the second floor suspended in
air.
The need for any such weird procedures is automatically
eliminated by the new theoretical system, which provides a single mechanism
of universal applicability to account for the cohesion of all solids and
liquids, and another mechanism of general applicability to account for
ionization. The new system likewise provides a simple and logical explanation
of the differences in the solubility characteristics of various classes
of substances. According to these new findings, the distinctions that
are commonly drawn between polar and non-polar substances, electrolytes
and non-electrolytes, etc., are matters only of degree and have no fundamental
significance. The cohesion of all solids and liquids, regardless of composition,
results from exactly the same cause: the establishment of equilibrium
between the inward-directed space-time force and the outward-directed
rotational forces of the individual atoms. Any substances in solution
may be ionized by the thermal forces of the liquid acting against the
cohesive forces, providing (1) that such a substance contains both a component
capable of taking a positive charge and one capable of taking a negative
charge, and (2) that the bond strengths do not exceed the strength of
the liquid thermal forces. Metals, for instance, cannot be ionized, as
they do not comply with requirement (1): they cannot be negatively charged.
Most organic compounds are nonelectrolytes because they do not comply
with requirement (2): their cohesive forces are too strong (that is, their
rotational forces are especially weak).
The explanation of electrolytic processes provided
by the Reciprocal System does not differ greatly from that embodied in
previous theories. The most obvious point of difference is in the identification
of the moving entities. Existing theory calls for a movement of charged
electrons, which are said to be carried by the negative ions through
the solution from the location of the original ionization to the cathode
and then travel independently through the external circuit to the point
of neutralization at the anode. In the Reciprocal System there is a movement
of units of space displacement over the same path. In the solution
these displacement units manifest themselves as negative charges; in matter
they become uncharged electrons.
The change in aspect which the space displacement unit
undergoes when it enters a new environment at the cathode warrants some
special comment as it is typical of the kind of changes that are now causing
the physicists so much distress: those which Marshak admits, in the statement
previously quoted, are extremely disconcerting. The situation
here is that the physicists concept of continuity or persistence
in the physical universe is based largely on their observations of matter.
The atom of matter is a complex structure which because of its complexity,
cannot be directly converted into anything else. It may expel particles;
it may absorb particles; it may even split into two or more smaller atoms,
but it does not suddenly change from atom to non-atom (except perhaps
in an annihilation process, and even this process is not commonly regarded
as a conversion of the atom into something else, but rather as a destruction
of the atom). With this example of the atom before them, the physicists
and their colleagues in other scientific fields have formed a concept
of the basic entities of the physical universe as things: units
whose identity persists through the various physical processes to which
they are subjected.
On the basis of this concept, the activities of the theoretical
branch of physical science have been directed toward finding explanations
of physical phenomena, which will preserve the identities of the things
that are involved. Discovery of the electron and observation of the ejection
of electrons by radioactive atoms led to the formulation of a theory of
atomic structure in which electrons participate as electrons. Collateral
requirements stemming from this hypothesis then led to the further conclusion
that charged hydrogen atoms, or protons, also participate in the atomic
structure as protons. When neutrons were discovered, the theory
was modified to include these particles in the structure as neutrons.
Now that mesons have appeared in great profusion, vigorous efforts are
being made to devise means whereby these particles can participate in
the theoretical structure of the atom as mesons. It is this concept
of the persistence of electrons as electrons, of neutrons as neutrons,
etc., that is now being systematically demolished by the experimenters,
to the great distress of the theorists.
The truth is that the universe simply is not constructed
in the manner that present-day theorists envision. Atoms, electrons, neutrons,
mesons, and the like, are not things; they are combinations
of various kinds of motion, and they have no persistence from one environment
to another, except to the limited extent that structural complexity places
some restrictions on the kind of transformations that can take placea
qualification that is significant only in the case of the atom. A neutron,
for example, is not absorbed by an atom as a neutron; it is absorbed
as a unit of time displacement, and the neutron, as such, does
not play any part in the structure of the atom. The unit of time displacement,
which was the essence of the independent neutron merely, adds to
the previously existing motion of the atom and becomes an integral part
of that motion. It is the unit of time displacement (that is, the
unit of motion) that persists, not the neutron.
The frequent transformations and exchanges of identity
among the sub-atomic particles that are so bewildering to the present
generation of physicists are perfectly normal processes, and the only
step that is necessary in order to make them fully understandable is to
discard the traditional idea that the participants in these processes
are things. Once it is realized that only the unit of motion
persists and that the particular aspect, which this unit will wear, depends
on its environment, the whole situation clears up automatically.
In the electrolytic process, which we are now considering,
the withdrawal of electrons from the cathode by means of the external
energy source (battery or equivalent) creates the electrical equivalent
of a vacuum in the cathode. The negative ion cannot penetrate matter,
but the negative charge on this ion is the equivalent of an uncharged
electron, and since it is easily detached from the ion, it is forced
into the electrical vacuum of the cathode. In the context
of previous thinking, in which a charge is regarded as a thing
and an uncharged electron is regarded as a thing, of a totally
different, even antithetical, character, the idea of such an exchange
of identities is simply absurd. But when we realize that the charge of
a negative ion is not a thing but a motion, and that an uncharged
electron is an equivalent motionone which has exactly the same magnitude
and same space-time directionit becomes understandable that the
ionic charge, which cannot exist as such within the cathode, should enter
the cathode as an uncharged electron.
The RS explanation of the ionization process as a whole
is similarly logical and self-consistent, and it is in agreement with
all of the known facts in the area concerned; something that no other
theory can claim. Furthermore, the new system provides a specific reason
for everything that happens in the process, unlike current theory, which
leaves several important steps unexplained. There is a specific tangible
force, the force of the space-time progression, which accounts for the
atomic cohesion; there is another specific tangible force, the thermal
force of the liquid molecules, which causes the cohesion to be overcome
and ionization to take place; there is a specific force due to the concentration
of charges in the neighborhood of each electrode which accounts for the
migration of the ions to the electrodes; there is an externally applied
force which causes movement of electrons from cathode to anode in the
external circuit there is a specific unbalance of forces, the electron
vacuum at the cathode and the electron pressure at the
anode, resulting from this forced movement of electrons which causes the
action that takes place at each electrode. None of these forces, those
previously known or those added by the new theory, is a demonan
ad hoc construction invented for the particular purpose at handthe
existence of each one can be demonstrated independently of the application
in which it has here been utilized.
As brought out in Chapter XI, the uncharged electron,
a rotating unit of space displacement, can move freely through matter,
a time structure, but cannot move through open space, since the relation
of space to space is not motion. An uncharged positron, a unit of rotational
time displacement, can move freely through open space but, in general,
cannot move through matter, since the relation of time to time is not
motion. There are a few substances, which have enough space displacement
in their atomic structures to make positron movement theoretically possible,
but there is also another obstacle to such movement because a positron
is vulnerable to capture by an atom and will probably be absorbed before
it has gone very far. Charged electrons and positrons are neutral from
the space-time standpoint, and since they contain both space and time
displacement they can move freely in either space or matter. Like their
uncharged counterparts, however, charged positrons are subject to capture,
and they have thus far been observed only in open space. Charged electrons
are common, both in space and in matter, and in their various manifestations
are known as static electricity.
The behavior of charged electrons in matter is similar,
in many respects, to that of the uncharged electrons that constitute the
electric current. In response to potential differences they move freely
in good conductors, less freely in poor conductors, are restrained by
insulators, etc., and in motion they have the same magnetic effects as
the uncharged units. The mutual repulsion between the charges introduces
some observable differences, however, and the electrostatic forces that
are exerted by the charges both while they are in motion and while they
are at rest distinguish charged from uncharged electrons in a clear and
definite manner. The origin and characteristics of these electrostatic
forces and the nature of the magnetic effects will be given some further
consideration in the next chapter after the underlying principles have
been clarified.

Chart C
With the additions, which have been made to the compound
motion system in the subject matter of this chapter, we may now expand
Chart B in the manner shown in Chart C. The explanation of the nature
and origin of the charges, as indicated by their positions on the enlarged
chart, and the clarification of the true relation of electric charge to
electric current constitute item number eleven in the list of Outstanding
Achievements of the Reciprocal System. The particular innovation that
has been introduced here and has made this achievement possible should
be somewhat less disturbing to existing habits of thought than most of
its predecessors. The idea that a charge is a motiona rotational
vibrationis, of course, entirely new to science, but it does not
conflict with any previous explanation of the nature of the charge, since
no such explanation has ever been proposed heretofore, and the new concept
is therefore an addition to current thought rather than a revision. Some
of the consequences of the innovation are at odds with accepted
ideas, to be sure, but this is always true when new concepts are introduced.
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