Here you seem to be confirming that there is no direct force between particles that are not manhattan-adjacent ... see below
Now time is a particle? this just gets weirder.
No the expansion of the Grid is time – what are the consequences of working out what F and E are when D = 4? Why is it m
3 and r
3? Because we’re now talking about an increase in volume, the expansion of the Grid. We experience time as linear as everything expands at the same rate which is defined by the expansion of the Grid.
A snapshot in time is basically stopping the grid from expanding. You can consider this collapsing the waveform. At this point of time you know where all the particles in the Grid are. Let the Grid expand again– all the particles move so now you know where they are going.
'c' is usually reserved for the speed of light in a vacuum. You've been using 'c' in your 'maths'. Are you now redefining that symbol, or did you always use it with a non-standard meaning?
I am defining what c is. c is the maximum speed anything can move in the Grid and this relates to the size of the Grid, the maximum length of one of the sides. The maximum length of a side is defined by the size of the Grid.
... Oh, I think the onus is on you to prove it would be a cubic arrangement.
Ok. A gravity particle is a particle that repels all other gravity particles, this defines the shape of the Grid. Consider this repulsion equal for all the particles. Again we’ll think about it in 2D so these particles can only exists in a plane. If 4 particles exist in what arrangement will they be? A square. Why is it a square? Because the equations for F and E suggest it’s a square.
I have a horrible feeling this is sort of circular as I have explained it. But fundamentally the structure of the Grid is defining reality – it is defining what the relationships between F, E, G, m and r are.
... You're missing my point. You could move one vertex -- you could even yank it out of the crystal. The point is such deformations would be local. I can't remember precisely how localized such a distortion might be, but I think it'd be around a few tens of atoms.
Here is how to picture it.
Consider a crystal with a cubic structure, all the cubes are equal. These cubes are defining the space a particle could reside in and the possible directions of movement which is moving from one cube to the next. Now we add a particle in the crystal at the centre – you can consider this particle as residing in one of the cubes. Gravity (or the effect of it) can be considered as the most probable direction a particle will travel in the crystal if the structure of the Grid is distorted. While the crystal is a uniform Grid of cubes the particle will probably go nowhere, every direction is as likely as another.
Now let’s expand one of the cubes adjacent to the cube the particle is in. The expansion in this cube will expand all the adjacent cubes – it is defining the area of one side of all the adjacent cubes. So our particle will now be more likely to go towards the expanded cube, this is the effect of Gravity.
Why does this work at a distance? Let’s start again with the particle in the uniform Grid. Instead of expanding a cube adjacent to our particle let’s expand a cube two cubes in one direction, so not next to our particle cube but the one next to that. When this cube expands it distorts all the cubes next to it – including the cube adjacent to our cube that contains the particle. So again the cube next to our particle’s cube has expanded therefore that is the likely direction.
So the effect of Gravity is the area of the square the particle is likely to move to, calculated by m1 * m2 where m1 and m2 are the lengths of the sides of the largest square (direction of movement), proportional to the distance squared as we are talking about differences in area.