Quote:
Originally Posted by antoniseb
You put a lot of ideas in that post, and it will be difficult to discuss them all at once. Do you feel like defending your ideas about the anti-graviton?
Why do you think that the anti-particle of the graviton should increase its influence with distance? The anti-particle to the electron has an opposite charge, but still has the inverse-square law for the field strength of that charge.
|
I'll support and defend my ideas about the anti-graviton, but I'm not going to enforce them. I feel priveliged to be able to discuss my ideas amongst the brilliant minds on this forum and the last thing i seek to do is to force my beliefs on them.
As far as your point on the positron goes, you must keep in mind that the graviton is a gauge boson that itself has an infinite field of reach, the electron is a lepton carried by the photon. I dont know if this a valid response to your proposed argument, but the graviton itself has never been directly observed, and because of this, it is impossible for anyone to say if its properties are for sure going to be the opposites, I have proposed. But I definitely consider it a possibility for this mysterious force that so little is known about.
You do put up an interesting argument though and I'd like to thank you for taking the time to listen to my ideas.