top of page

Graviton Pressure Theory

The Unified Framework

Individual Submission

This document is part of a multi-part scientific framework

Part 3 of 30

The Gravity Catalog

This submission is part of the broader Graviton Pressure Theory (GPT)

project, a comprehensive redefinition of gravitational interaction rooted in

causal field dynamics and coherent force transmission. While each

document is designed to stand independently, its full context and

significance emerge as part of the larger framework. For complete

understanding, please refer to the full GPT series developed by Shareef

Ali Rashada ** email ali.rashada@gmail.com

Author: Shareef Ali Rashada

Date: June 12, 2025

Contents

3.1 The Case for Observation Before Explanation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

3.1.1 Reclaiming the Raw Truth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

3.1.2 The Primacy of What We Know . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

3.1.3 Setting the Stage for Truth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

3.1.4 A World Before Equations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

3.2 Human-Scale Gravitational Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

3.2.1 The Embodied Presence of Gravity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

3.2.2 Weight and Pressure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

3.2.3 Balance and Orientation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

3.2.4 Effort and Resistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

3.2.5 Falling and Jumping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

3.2.6 Biological Shaping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

3.2.7 Pendulum Motion and Swinging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

3.2.8 Breathing and Postural Pressure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

3.2.9 Hair and Clothing Drape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

3.2.10 A Baseline for Embodiment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

3.3 Environmental Interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3.3.1 Gravity’s Silent Guidance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3.3.2 Settling of Dust, Fluids, and Solids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3.3.3 Water Flowing Downhill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3.3.4 Flames Rising, Gases Stratifying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3.3.5 Tree Growth and Branch Orientation (Geotropism) . . . . . . . . . . 12

3.3.6 Avalanches and Landslides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

3.3.7 Bubble and Foam Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

3.3.8 A Natural Order Defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

3.4 Built World Consequences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

3.4.1 Gravity’s Hand on Human Craft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

3.4.2 Need for Support Structures and Foundations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

3.4.3 Bridge, Elevator, and Aircraft Design Constraints . . . . . . . . . . . 13

3.4.4 Architectural Orientation (Verticality vs. Horizontality) . . . . . . . . 13

3.4.5 Plumb Lines and Level Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

3.4.6 Sagging and Material Fatigue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

3.4.7 A World Engineered Against Gravity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

3.5 Planetary and Local Celestial Phenomena . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

3.5.1 Gravity’s Cosmic Reach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

3.5.2 Tides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

3.5.3 Orbits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

3.5.4 Precession and Wobble . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

3.5.5 Atmospheric Retention . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

3.5.6 Lagrange Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

3.5.7 Roche Limit Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

3.5.8 Anchoring Life and Technology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

2

3.6 Solar System and Deep Space Dynamics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

3.6.1 Gravity’s Vast Canvas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

3.6.2 Planetary Arrangement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

3.6.3 Asteroid Belts and Gaps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

3.6.4 Comets and Long Orbits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

3.6.5 Solar Motion and Heliopause . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

3.6.6 Galactic Structures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

3.6.7 Black Holes and Lensing Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

3.6.8 Binary Star Orbits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

3.6.9 Galactic Cluster Dynamics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

3.6.10 Bridging Earth to the Stars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

3.7 Anomalies, Extremes, and Edge Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

3.7.1 Gravity’s Unseen Edges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

3.7.2 Gravity Variations on Earth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

3.7.3 Weightlessness in Orbit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

3.7.4 Gravitational Slingshot Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

3.7.5 Gravitational Time Dilation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

3.7.6 Equatorial Bulge Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

3.7.7 Revealing Complexity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

3.8 What We Were Told: From Newton to Einstein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

3.8.1 Newton’s Gravity: Force Without Cause . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

3.8.2 From Force to Curvature: General Relativity Emerges . . . . . . . . . 22

3.8.3 Institutional Adoption and Public Understanding . . . . . . . . . . . 22

3.8.4 Positioning GR Against the Catalog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

3.8.5 The Purpose of Revelation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

3.9 Evaluating GR Through Everyday Gravity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

3.9.1 Testing the Abstract Against the Real . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

3.9.2 The Feeling of Weight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

3.9.3 The Relief of Lying Down . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

3.9.4 Balance as a Constant Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

3.9.5 Motion Requires Resistance Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

3.9.6 Inversion Increases Discomfort . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

3.9.7 Falling Feels Different From Jumping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

3.9.8 Bracing for Impact . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

3.9.9 Fatigue from Standing Still . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

3.9.10 Weightlessness Feels Wrong . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

3.9.11 Touch, Pressure, and Gravity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

3.9.12 Pendulum Motion and Swinging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

3.9.13 Breathing and Postural Pressure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

3.9.14 Hair and Clothing Drape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

3.9.15 A Catalog Unmet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

3.10 Real-World Design Blind Spots: Buildings, Weight, and Physical Load . . . 27

3.10.1 The Unseen Load in Construction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

3.10.2 Buildings, Weight, and Real-World Physics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

3.10.3 A Blindness to Stability’s Craft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

3

3.11 Celestial Phenomena Reexamined: GR’s Explanations in Practice . . . . . . 28

3.11.1 Scrutinizing the Cosmic Throne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

3.11.2 Tides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

3.11.3 Orbits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

3.11.4 Rings and Belts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

3.11.5 Moon’s Synchronous Rotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

3.11.6 Lagrange Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

3.11.7 Binary Star Orbits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

3.11.8 Galactic Cluster Dynamics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

3.11.9 Roche Limit Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

3.11.10 Gravitational Time Dilation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

3.11.11A Fractured Cosmic Tale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

3.12 Gravity Observed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

3.12.1 A Complete Ledger of Influence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

3.12.2 The Authority of Observation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

3.12.3 The Challenge Before Us . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

3.12.4 A Threshold, Not a Finale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

4

This document begins with an inventory, not of theories, but of lived reality. Gravity is not

introduced through models or frameworks, but through its presence—what it does, how it

manifests, and where it exerts its influence.

The Veil of the Obvious

Gravity is not hidden. It is not elusive. It is not a mystery tucked into a black hole or

reserved for the instruments of high-energy labs. It is beneath your feet, above your head,

and within your chest. It acts constantly, visibly, relentlessly. And yet, in its familiarity, it

has disappeared from our attention.

We speak of ”weight” as if it were a number. We reference ”mass” as if it were a fixed trait.

We define ”force” as an equation.

But these are representations. The thing itself—the experience of gravity—is felt. It is the

press of the body against the floor. It is the resistance of the legs in standing. It is the effort

of the breath in lifting the chest.

Gravity is the most measured and the least questioned.

Living Under Gravity

The human body does not simply exist within gravity. It is shaped by it. From the curvature

of the spine to the composition of bone, our forms are an accommodation of continuous

vertical pressure.

Children crawl before they walk. Muscle must develop not for motion alone, but for resistance.

To stand is to oppose collapse. To breathe is to push back against pressure. Even in sleep,

the body rests not in suspension, but in resistance distributed horizontally.

Fatigue accumulates not just from movement, but from stillness. To sit upright is to engage

structure against gravitational compression.

The elderly often fall not because they are moving, but because they can no longer resist.

Signs in Structure

Architecture knows gravity. Every beam, arch, and foundation is a negotiation with pressure.

Load-bearing is not metaphorical. It is literal. Engineers speak of stress points and tolerance

because gravity is not passive—it is persistent.

A building does not rest. It holds. A bridge does not float. It strains. A column is not idle.

It compresses, constantly.

5

Celestial Scale, Familiar Pattern

We see the same pattern beyond ourselves.

Tides rise and fall. Moons lock into resonance. Planets spin in balance, not because of

mystical alignment, but because motion becomes equilibrium in a gravitational context.

And yet, in each of these, we often speak in abstractions. Curvature. Attraction. Pull. These

words describe trajectory, but not cause. They do not name the pressure. They do not

explain the compression. They do not point to what is resisting.

A Field We Endure, Not Explain

Before we debate models, we must reclaim the raw reality of what gravity does.

Every step is against it. Every structure defies it. Every moment of standing, sitting,

breathing, and sleeping is shaped by its unrelenting presence.

This is the catalog of what is seen. It is not yet theory. It is not yet cause.

It is what presses. It is what resists. It is what remains.

6

3.1 The Case for Observation Before Explanation

3.1.1 Reclaiming the Raw Truth

This document stands apart—it is not a theory, not a model, not a metaphor, nor an attempt

to explain. It is an exhaustive observation log, a meticulous record of every human-scale

and cosmic-scale phenomenon attributed to gravity, from the subtle press of weight in your

feet to the sweeping arc of comets around a star. Before we tangle with how gravity works,

we must first confront what it does—unfiltered, unadorned, as it meets us in the world.

Too often, gravity’s essence is trimmed to fit mathematical molds, its richness sidelined by

what equations permit or forbid. Here, we begin elsewhere: with the undeniable reality of

experience.

3.1.2 The Primacy of What We Know

You know gravity without a textbook. You feel objects fall, sense the effort of standing

upright, notice relief when lying flat after a long day. You see the moon tug the tides, watch

a thrown ball curve back to Earth. These are not theoretical premises—they are lived truths,

etched into muscle, bone, and breath, observed in rivers and stars. This catalog does not start

with equations; it starts with what you already know, what every child grasps before learning

the word, what every body understands before a single formula is penned. By documenting

everything gravity appears to touch, we reclaim the ground of direct experience—ours by

right, not by derivation.

3.1.3 Setting the Stage for Truth

Why this approach? Before we argue over mechanisms—before we bend gravity into models

of curvature, force, or pressure—we must map its full scope. This inventory lays bare the

phenomena any theory must face: the ache in your legs, the orbit of moons, the collapse of

dust to the floor. It prepares a stage for fair evaluation—let Newtonian mechanics, General

Relativity, or Graviton Pressure Theory step forward and account for these effects. If a theory

cannot explain the catalog laid out here, it falls short of completeness. Readers might ask:

why not start with a hypothesis? Because observation precedes explanation—truth begins

with what we see, feel, and measure, not with what we assume.

3.1.4 A World Before Equations

This is the world we inhabit, raw and unfiltered—before equations drape it in abstraction,

before theories claim to own it. Gravity is not yet a force, a field, or a curve; it is the weight

on your shoulders, the tide’s rhythm, the comet’s dance. This catalog honors that primacy,

offering a ledger of experience as the standard against which all frameworks must be judged.

As we expand this record—adding the sway of pendulums, the stretch of shadows—we deepen

its challenge: explain this, all of this, or step aside. Here, we stand with eyes open, cataloging

gravity’s reach across muscle, moon, and Milky Way, ready to question what comes next.

7

3.2 Human-Scale Gravitational Experience

3.2.1 The Embodied Presence of Gravity

This section turns to the immediate, physical, and perceptual ways gravity shapes the human

body and daily life—phenomena so woven into our existence that they often slip beneath

notice, yet so persistent they define how we live, move, and sense the world. These are

not abstract effects to be charted on a graph; they are continuous, embodied experiences,

felt in flesh and bone, guiding our actions from cradle to grave. Here, we catalog gravity’s

intimate role in human structure and behavior—a baseline of lived reality that any theory

must confront.

3.2.2 Weight and Pressure

Gravity’s most universal signature is the sensation it imprints on us—relentless, ever-present,

shaping our very form:

• The constant sensation of downward force, experienced as weight, is a universal human

experience. Limbs hang heavy, internal organs press against their cavities, and even

facial muscles sag subtly under this pressure—a continuous load carried throughout life.

• Standing upright introduces a persistent pressure load on bones and muscles. Over

time, this burden accumulates, creating discomfort or fatigue in the feet and lower

back—a slow ache indicative of gravity’s unceasing presence.

• Relief is experienced when lying down or entering buoyant environments like water.

These conditions redistribute or partially neutralize the gravitational load, offering a

reduction in strain.

Why does lying down feel so good? Because gravity’s pressure spreads out, giving parts of

the body a break from constant load.

3.2.3 Balance and Orientation

Gravity governs balance, posture, and spatial awareness:

• Human posture is a dynamic equilibrium, maintained through continuous adjustments

from the vestibular system and musculoskeletal coordination. These systems work

together to counteract gravitational displacement.

• Inversion—placing the head below the feet—disrupts this equilibrium. It leads to

increased cranial pressure and spatial disorientation, revealing how strongly human

physiology is adapted to an upright orientation relative to gravity.

• The instinctive fear of falling is deeply rooted in the nervous system. It reflects gravity’s

psychological imprint—an innate awareness that loss of balance has consequences.

Why does being upside down feel so strange? Because everything in your body is built to

8

work with gravity pulling from above, not below.

3.2.4 Effort and Resistance

Motion requires constant effort against gravitational force:

• Gravity defines the resistance encountered in movement—lifting an object, climbing

stairs, or ascending inclines all demand additional energy as gravitational opposition

increases.

• Acceleration and deceleration during travel—whether in vehicles or elevators—alter the

experienced gravitational load. Muscular responses adjust to these changes as the body

interprets variations in force.

• Even stationary standing demands effort. Muscles must remain engaged to counteract

gravitational pull and prevent collapse, indicating that resisting gravity is a continuous,

energy-dependent process.

Why does just standing still make you tired? Because your body is working constantly to

keep you upright—even when you’re not moving.

3.2.5 Falling and Jumping

Gravity expresses itself in extremes of motion:

• Freefall generates a distinct physiological response. The absence of typical pressure

cues results in a momentary feeling of lightness or disorientation.

• The ”stomach drop” sensation occurs as internal organs lag behind the body’s rapid

descent, illustrating a brief mismatch in internal versus external motion.

• Terminal velocity demonstrates that falling has limits. Once gravitational pull is

matched by air resistance, acceleration ceases—a natural boundary determined by

opposing forces.

Why does falling feel different than other movements? Because it’s the one time gravity isn’t

being held back—it’s having its way with you, until something stops it.

3.2.6 Biological Shaping

Gravity has influenced the evolution and maintenance of human physiology:

• Bone density responds to load. Prolonged exposure to microgravity results in bone loss,

revealing gravity’s role in skeletal maintenance.

• The cardiovascular system adapts to gravitational gradients. Valves in veins prevent

backflow, and heart pressure distribution is shaped by vertical orientation.

9

• Human skeletal and muscular structures evolved to operate under gravitational load.

Joint angles, limb proportions, and gait patterns reflect this adaptation.

Why does space weaken the body? Because it takes away the gravity our bones and blood

were built to work against.

3.2.7 Pendulum Motion and Swinging

Gravity enables oscillatory motion through directional constraint:

• A pendulum swings by cycling between potential and kinetic energy under gravitational

guidance. Whether in a clock or a playground swing, it consistently returns toward

equilibrium.

Why does a swing always slow and come back to center? Because gravity keeps pulling, no

matter how far you try to push away.

3.2.8 Breathing and Postural Pressure

Respiration is subtly influenced by body position relative to gravity:

• Standing introduces resistance to diaphragmatic expansion. Lying down reduces this

resistance, altering respiratory efficiency.

Why is it easier to breathe lying down? Because gravity isn’t pressing down on your chest in

the same way.

3.2.9 Hair and Clothing Drape

Gravity affects even non-structural elements of the body:

• Hair and garments align vertically. Their flow and tension shift with posture, conforming

to gravitational pull.

Why do they fall the way they do? Because gravity is always guiding them down, whether

you notice or not.

3.2.10 A Baseline for Embodiment

These gravitational effects define the physiological context in which humans exist. They are

not incidental—they are foundational. Any gravitational theory must account for them—not

as background noise, but as primary data.

This is gravity as experienced. It is the pre-theoretical ground on which all explanation must

stand.

10

3.3 Environmental Interactions

3.3.1 Gravity’s Silent Guidance

Gravity manifests constantly in the behavior of our immediate environment, guiding the

movement, placement, and behavior of materials in predictable ways—patterns so embedded

in daily life that they often go unnoticed unless disrupted. These effects ripple through

air, water, and earth, shaping the world we touch and see. This section catalogs gravity’s

pervasive hand, a force that sorts, directs, and balances without pause, its presence a quiet

architect of the natural order.

3.3.2 Settling of Dust, Fluids, and Solids

Gravity’s sorting touch is ever-present, organizing matter with subtle insistence:

• Particulate matter, including dust and soot, slowly descends and collects on horizontal

surfaces—a fine veil settling over time, revealing gravity’s patient pull downward.

• Fluids stratify based on density, heavier components sinking to the bottom—water over

oil, silt over sand—each layer a testament to gravity’s relentless ordering.

• Sedimentation in water, oil separation, and the layering of granular materials like sand

or gravel illustrate gravity’s sorting function—a steady hand stacking the world’s loose

ends.

Why does dust linger only to fall? Gravity’s pull overcomes air’s resistance. What rises or

floats eventually returns.

3.3.3 Water Flowing Downhill

Water bends to gravity’s will, tracing paths we see and use:

• The constant motion of water from high to low elevation defines erosion, carves riverbeds,

and spreads floodplains—gravity’s chisel sculpting landscapes over eons.

• Plumbing systems, drainage design, and aqueducts rely on gravity-driven flow—pipes

slant, channels deepen, all bowing to gravity’s persistent direction.

• Even small surface irregularities guide water movement—a pebble’s dip, a crack’s

tilt—revealing gravity’s fine control.

What drives the stream? Gravity provides the path and the pull.

3.3.4 Flames Rising, Gases Stratifying

Gravity shapes fire and air, a dance of heat and weight:

• In Earth-normal conditions, flames point upward due to convection—heated gases rise

11

as denser, cooler air displaces them, a process made possible by gravity.

• In zero-G, flames become spherical, losing their upward thrust—gravity’s absence

confirming its role in shaping fire’s form.

• Gases naturally stratify in enclosed spaces—carbon dioxide pools in basements, helium

lifts balloons—molecular weight responding to gravitational pressure.

Why do flames stretch skyward? Gravity moves cooler air down, and hot gases follow the

only direction left—up.

3.3.5 Tree Growth and Branch Orientation (Geotropism)

Gravity molds the living world, guiding growth against its pull:

• Trees grow upward, defying gravity’s weight, while roots plunge downward—branches

angle to balance light and load, their shape partly determined by gravitational direction.

How do trees stand tall? Gravity provides both the resistance and the reference.

3.3.6 Avalanches and Landslides

Gravity’s power surges in sudden shifts:

• Loose earth, snow, or rocks slide downhill—avalanches roar, landslides reshape—when

gravity overcomes friction or cohesion.

What triggers the fall? When material strength is exceeded, gravity acts without delay.

3.3.7 Bubble and Foam Behavior

Gravity sorts the lightest forms:

• Bubbles rise in liquids, foam stacks upward—lighter fluids float atop denser ones.

Why do bubbles climb? Lighter materials displace heavier ones under gravity’s sorting

influence.

3.3.8 A Natural Order Defined

These environmental interactions—so routine they fade into the background—reveal gravity’s

ceaseless work. Dust settles, rivers carve, flames flicker upward—not as random acts, but as

predictable consequences of gravitational interaction. Stability and flow, stratification and

collapse—all emerge from the same ever-present influence.

12

3.4 Built World Consequences

3.4.1 Gravity’s Hand on Human Craft

Gravity governs the design, construction, and stability of all human-made environments—from

the humblest tool to the tallest skyscraper, every engineered system contends with this

omnipresent force. It’s a silent partner in every blueprint, a challenge met or defied by our

hands. This section explores how gravity shapes the built world, its influence a constant in

the structures we inhabit.

3.4.2 Need for Support Structures and Foundations

Gravity demands a firm base for all we build:

• Every building must counteract the downward pull on its mass with foundational

support—resisting gravitational load over time.

• Load-bearing walls, columns, and deep footings anchor structural integrity—each a

barrier against collapse.

• The taller the structure, the more it must withstand gravitational stress and leverage

effects.

Why do foundations matter? Because everything rests under gravity’s influence—support is

not optional.

3.4.3 Bridge, Elevator, and Aircraft Design Constraints

Gravity sets the limits of motion and span:

• Bridges bear their own weight plus dynamic loads—vehicles, wind—accounting for

gravitational stress and deflection.

• Elevators require powerful motors and counterweights to overcome gravitational pull,

each ascent a push against resistance.

• Aircraft depend on lift-to-weight ratios—gravity defines flight’s constraints, influencing

every design.

What constrains flight? Gravity always imposes a cost.

3.4.4 Architectural Orientation (Verticality vs. Horizontality)

Gravity dictates how we build and dwell:

• Vertical structures require balance and strength; horizontal ones reduce stress and

distribute load.

13

• Human ergonomics reflect this—stairs, ramps, furniture are designed to manage gravitational

demand.

• Tall architecture contends with gravity as much as it rises above it.

Why do we build tall with care? Because gravity always waits at the base.

3.4.5 Plumb Lines and Level Tools

Gravity aligns our craft with precision:

• Builders use plumb lines to ensure verticality, spirit levels to confirm flatness—gravity

defines reference.

How do we measure true? By trusting the pull that never wavers.

3.4.6 Sagging and Material Fatigue

Gravity wears on what we make:

• Roofs sag, cables droop, furniture compresses—gravity’s constant load alters form and

function over time.

Why do things bend? Because gravity acts without rest.

3.4.7 A World Engineered Against Gravity

From foundations to flight, gravity shapes the built world—its effects a constant in every

structure, tool, and space. Gravity’s pull is both a challenge and a guide—a force that must

be met, answered, and respected in every human creation.

3.5 Planetary and Local Celestial Phenomena

3.5.1 Gravity’s Cosmic Reach

This section details gravitational effects that govern Earth and its immediate cosmic neighborhood—

phenomena that stretch beyond the human scale yet remain fully observable. Often

treated as orbital abstractions, these effects are direct and measurable. They influence tides,

orbits, and the retention of our atmosphere, anchoring Earth in patterns that are ancient

and practical. This section catalogs those effects without attributing cause—only observing

the reach and consequences of gravity within our local space.

3.5.2 Tides

Gravity affects water, rock, and atmosphere in regular, measurable ways:

14

• Ocean levels rise and fall in response to the Moon’s position relative to Earth. Water

forms bulges both toward and opposite the Moon, creating predictable high and low

tides.

• The Moon is tidally locked, always showing the same face to Earth. This locking,

caused by long-term gravitational interaction, is common in celestial mechanics.

• Earth’s crust and atmosphere also respond to tidal forces. The ground itself rises and

falls by up to 30 centimeters. Atmospheric pressure fluctuates slightly with lunar and

solar alignment.

Why do tides rise? Because Earth is flexible, and gravity doesn’t stop at water’s edge.

3.5.3 Orbits

Gravitational interaction defines orbital patterns:

• Earth’s orbit around the Sun defines the year. Its path is elliptical and governed by

centripetal force.

• The Moon orbits Earth, affecting tides and showing gradual recession as energy transfers

through tidal forces.

• Satellites—natural and artificial—maintain orbit by balancing speed and distance to

match gravitational pull.

What keeps them circling? A balance of motion and gravity—no engine required once aligned.

3.5.4 Precession and Wobble

Gravity influences Earth’s rotational stability:

• Earth’s axis traces a circle in space over about 26,000 years due to gravitational

torque—this is axial precession.

• Nutation causes a slight irregularity in that precession, driven by the Moon’s nodal

cycle.

• The Chandler wobble, a 14-month oscillation, is caused by internal mass shifts and

external gravitational effects.

Why the wobble? Because gravity responds to shape, tilt, and uneven mass—perfect balance

is rare.

3.5.5 Atmospheric Retention

Earth’s atmosphere is shaped and held by gravity:

15

• Earth retains gases like oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide due to sufficient gravitational

pull. Smaller bodies like the Moon cannot hold comparable atmospheres.

• Escape velocity defines the minimum speed needed to leave Earth’s gravitational

influence. This affects both spaceflight and the long-term retention of atmospheric

particles.

How does air stay? Gravity holds what Earth is strong enough to keep.

3.5.6 Lagrange Points

Balanced gravity creates useful orbital positions:

• In two-body systems like Earth-Sun or Earth-Moon, there are five positions where

the gravitational forces balance the orbital motion of a third object. These are the

Lagrange points.

• The James Webb Space Telescope, for example, orbits around Earth-Sun L2, a gravitationally

stable position for deep space observation.

Why do they stay there? Because forces cancel out—gravity creates equilibrium zones.

3.5.7 Roche Limit Effects

Gravitational stress sets a boundary for structural integrity:

• When a body like a moon or asteroid comes too close to a planet, tidal forces can

exceed the object’s internal cohesion.

• This leads to breakup or prevents formation of large moons within this radius—seen

most clearly in ring systems like Saturn’s.

What breaks them apart? The same force that holds planets together—applied too unevenly.

3.5.8 Anchoring Life and Technology

These celestial phenomena, though large in scale, directly affect life on Earth. They guide

space travel, satellite placement, seasonal change, and ocean behavior. Gravity’s role in

shaping these patterns is measurable and persistent, and this catalog documents their structure

and scope before any theory is applied.

3.6 Solar System and Deep Space Dynamics

3.6.1 Gravity’s Vast Canvas

This section stretches the gravitational catalog beyond Earth’s immediate reach, encompassing

the solar system and interstellar domain—a realm where planetary structures, comets, and

16

galaxies dance to gravity’s tune, or whatever causal replacement holds sway. From the Sun’s

cradle to the Milky Way’s edge, these phenomena reveal how stability scales across immense

distances and intricate interactions, each a testament to gravity’s reach, observable yet vast.

Here, we inventory these cosmic effects, bridging local experience to the architecture of the

stars.

3.6.2 Planetary Arrangement

Gravity shapes the structure of the solar system:

• All known planets orbit the Sun in elliptical paths within the ecliptic plane. This

alignment is typically linked to the angular momentum of the early protoplanetary disk,

but its long-term stability suggests deeper gravitational ordering.

• Orbital resonances, such as Neptune and Pluto’s 3:2 ratio, reflect persistent gravitational

relationships. These patterns maintain harmony and prevent collisions.

Why this order? Because gravity arranges mass and motion into stable configurations over

time.

3.6.3 Asteroid Belts and Gaps

Gravity organizes even the debris of the solar system:

• The asteroid belt lies between Mars and Jupiter. Its shape and boundaries are heavily

influenced by Jupiter’s gravity.

• Kirkwood gaps represent regions within the belt where orbital resonances with Jupiter

clear objects. These gaps align with mathematically unstable orbits.

• Trojan asteroids cluster at Lagrange points—gravitationally stable zones where smaller

bodies remain fixed relative to a planet and the Sun.

What clears the gaps? Gravitational resonance shapes the field and defines the space.

3.6.4 Comets and Long Orbits

Gravity controls distant objects on extreme paths:

• Many comets follow highly elliptical orbits. Their trajectories bring them close to the

Sun and then send them back to the outer solar system.

• Objects from the Oort Cloud or Kuiper Belt may be perturbed inward by gravitational

influence.

• Gravity assists—slingshot maneuvers—use the gravity of large planets to increase speed

or redirect paths, mirroring natural comet behavior.

17

Why the long arc? Because gravity doesn’t stop—it extends and redirects.

3.6.5 Solar Motion and Heliopause

Gravity operates on the solar system as a whole:

• The Sun orbits the center of the Milky Way, dragging the solar system along in a vast

galactic journey.

• The heliosphere is the region dominated by solar wind, shaped by gravitational and

particle pressures. Its boundary is the heliopause.

• At the heliopause, solar pressure meets the interstellar medium, forming a termination

shock—an interface shaped by motion and gravitational constraint.

What bounds the bubble? Gravity interacts with space and matter to set dynamic limits.

3.6.6 Galactic Structures

Gravity shapes galaxies over cosmic timescales:

• Spiral arms are not fixed structures but density waves that move through galactic discs,

triggering star formation.

• Stars orbit at speeds that defy Newtonian predictions, leading to theories of dark matter

or alternative gravity models.

• The galactic form remains coherent despite rotational disparities, indicating a balancing

gravitational mechanism.

Why the spiral? Because structure persists where mass and motion are balanced.

3.6.7 Black Holes and Lensing Effects

Gravity reaches extremes in collapsed regions:

• Black holes form when mass collapses past a critical point. Gravity there becomes so

intense not even light can escape.

• Light bends around massive bodies, an effect known as gravitational lensing. This

observation confirms gravity’s impact on the geometry of light paths.

• Accretion disks form as matter spirals into these objects, producing jets and extreme

emissions from material under high gravitational stress.

What bends the light? Massive bodies warp the path—gravity’s effect on motion and energy.

18

3.6.8 Binary Star Orbits

Gravity binds stars into mutual orbits:

• Binary star systems orbit around a shared center of mass. These orbits follow precise

paths shaped by the stars’ gravitational interaction.

Why the dance? Mutual gravity defines the pair’s motion and period.

3.6.9 Galactic Cluster Dynamics

Gravity holds galaxies together in larger systems:

• Galaxies group into clusters, like the Local Group, held by gravitational connection

across millions of light-years.

What holds the group? Gravitational interaction spanning vast distances.

3.6.10 Bridging Earth to the Stars

This section completes the gravitational record from planetary motions to galactic cohesion.

Gravity’s influence extends from the scale of solar system mechanics to galactic structure,

consistently anchoring physical systems across space and time. These patterns provide

an empirical basis for understanding order, establishing a framework of observation before

theoretical models attempt to interpret or explain them.

3.7 Anomalies, Extremes, and Edge Cases

3.7.1 Gravity’s Unseen Edges

This section focuses on gravitational phenomena that fall outside the everyday—where effects

become less intuitive or more pronounced. These are not just rare events; they are measurable

deviations and edge cases that expand our understanding of how gravity behaves in different

contexts. Each example offers a useful test case for any model of gravity aiming to account

for all observable behavior.

3.7.2 Gravity Variations on Earth

Gravity’s strength is not perfectly uniform across Earth’s surface:

• Gravity weakens at higher altitudes, such as on mountaintops, due to increased distance

from Earth’s center.

• It varies slightly with latitude—the equator experiences slightly weaker gravity than

the poles due to Earth’s equatorial bulge and rotation.

• Subsurface features like mountains or mineral deposits also cause detectable changes in

local gravitational strength.

19

• Microgravity conditions can be measured in specific structures like towers, mines, or

test tunnels where gravitational influence fluctuates slightly.

Why the variance? Because gravity responds to shape, rotation, and mass distribution—it

molds to Earth’s physical characteristics.

3.7.3 Weightlessness in Orbit

In orbit, gravitational effects are present but experienced differently:

• Objects in orbit are in continuous freefall. They move fast enough horizontally to fall

around the Earth rather than toward it.

• This creates a sensation of weightlessness—not due to the absence of gravity, but from

the balance of gravitational pull and orbital velocity.

• The human body reacts noticeably: muscle mass decreases, bone density declines, and

fluid distribution changes.

Why the float? Because orbit is a balanced fall—gravity is still active, but its effects are

countered by motion.

3.7.4 Gravitational Slingshot Effects

Gravity can be used to change the speed and direction of objects in motion:

• Spacecraft use gravitational slingshots (gravity assists) to gain velocity by passing near

large planets.

• The planet’s motion contributes to the spacecraft’s trajectory, conserving energy while

increasing speed.

• Comets and asteroids naturally exhibit similar dynamics during close planetary encounters.

Why the speed boost? Because gravitational fields can transfer momentum when paths are

aligned.

3.7.5 Gravitational Time Dilation

Gravity influences time as well as space:

• Clocks positioned closer to massive bodies tick more slowly than those farther away.

• This is observable with GPS satellites, which must account for both gravitational and

velocity-based time dilation.

• The effect, while subtle, is measurable and critical to modern navigation systems.

20

Why does time shift? Because gravity affects how quickly time passes near strong gravitational

fields.

3.7.6 Equatorial Bulge Effects

Gravity and rotation combine to shape Earth’s form:

• Earth is not a perfect sphere. It bulges at the equator due to centrifugal force caused

by rotation.

• This bulge causes variations in sea level and affects ocean currents, climate zones, and

satellite orbits.

Why the bulge? Because gravity must share influence with Earth’s rotation—it’s a combined

outcome of inward pull and outward momentum.

3.7.7 Revealing Complexity

These examples—variations, time shifts, weightlessness, and gravitational boosts—illustrate

that gravity is more than a uniform force. Its behavior changes with position, motion, and

surrounding mass. These effects offer valuable insight into gravity’s reach and adaptability.

Each one serves as a stress test for any explanatory framework and deepens the record of

what we observe.

3.8 What We Were Told: From Newton to Einstein

Before we present a new model of gravity, we must fairly and clearly examine the ones we

inherited—beginning not with Einstein, but with Newton. For many readers, especially those

outside academia, Newton’s laws remain the most familiar reference point. Gravity is often

still described as a pulling force between objects with mass, diminishing with distance. This

image, while powerful in its simplicity, masks a deeper shift that has occurred in modern

physics. General Relativity now underpins the dominant scientific explanation of gravity,

replacing Newton’s force model with one rooted in geometry.

This section outlines that transition—not to undermine it, but to clarify what was said, what

was changed, and what assumptions were passed forward. We do not begin with critique.

We begin with record.

3.8.1 Newton’s Gravity: Force Without Cause

Isaac Newton’s theory of gravity, first published in the late 17th century, defined gravity as

a force of attraction between masses. The strength of that force was proportional to the

product of the two masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between

them:

F = G

m1m2

r2 (3.1)

21

Here, G is the gravitational constant, m1 and m2 are the masses involved, and r is the

distance between their centers.

This model was remarkably predictive. It explained planetary motion, tides, and free fall.

It allowed engineers and astronomers to calculate trajectories with precision. But Newton

himself acknowledged a profound limitation: he could not explain how this force acted. What

caused one object to ”pull” on another across empty space? Newton declined to offer a

mechanism.

Despite this omission, Newtonian gravity became the dominant explanation of gravitational

behavior for centuries. Its practicality made it indispensable, and its lack of mechanism was

treated as a minor philosophical concern.

3.8.2 From Force to Curvature: General Relativity Emerges

In the early 20th century, Albert Einstein proposed a radically different view. Gravity, he

argued, was not a force at all. Instead, it was the result of curved spacetime. Massive objects

deform the geometry of space and time, and other objects follow the curves in that geometry.

This idea was formalized in the field equations of General Relativity:

Gμν + Λgμν =

8πG

c4 Tμν (3.2)

Here, Gμν is the Einstein tensor describing spacetime curvature1, Tμν is the stress-energy

tensor, gμν is the metric, Λ is the cosmological constant, and c is the speed of light.

Einstein’s theory explained several phenomena that Newtonian gravity could not—such as

the precession of Mercury’s orbit and the bending of light around stars. It also introduced

new concepts: geodesics2, time dilation, and the idea that mass and energy curve spacetime.

Importantly, General Relativity did not propose a mechanism either. It described the geometry

of motion but not the physical process by which curvature influenced mass. The ”force” of

gravity disappeared, replaced by the mathematical language of differential geometry.

3.8.3 Institutional Adoption and Public Understanding

Despite its abstract nature, General Relativity gradually replaced Newtonian gravity in

academic and scientific circles. Experimental confirmations, such as the 1919 Eddington

eclipse observation, gave it credibility. Its mathematical elegance and predictive power made

it the standard in astrophysics, cosmology, and high-level theoretical work.

1In General Relativity, gravity is modeled as curvature of spacetime rather than a force. Albert Einstein.

“Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation”. German. In: Sitzungsberichte der K¨oniglich Preussischen Akademie

der Wissenschaften (1915). In German, pp. 844–847

2Geodesics are the ’straightest’ possible paths in curved spacetime and represent free-fall trajectories in

General Relativity.

22

In educational settings, however, Newton’s model continued to be taught first, often without

context. Many students learned that ”gravity pulls” without ever encountering the concept

of spacetime curvature3. Even those exposed to GR rarely explored its assumptions.

The public understanding of gravity remains mixed: intuitive images of attraction persist,

while institutional science holds to a model that defines gravity as geometric distortion.

3.8.4 Positioning GR Against the Catalog

Now that we have presented the observable catalog of gravitational effects—ranging from

bodily experience to galactic dynamics—we are ready to ask a new question:

Does General Relativity explain what gravity actually does?

This is not a dismissal. It is an examination. We will now place GR’s concepts against

the empirical record. Where it matches, we acknowledge. Where it fails to describe, we

illuminate.

Only then can we introduce a new model—not as opposition, but as answer.

3.8.5 The Purpose of Revelation

We’re not here to attack the scientific tradition—our aim is illumination, not demolition.

General Relativity, with its elegant curves and cosmic predictions, has ruled our understanding,

cloaked in the precision of math. Yet beneath this sheen, we seek its blind spots—places where

abstractions drift from what we feel, where stability’s tug and entropy’s pull are replaced

by placeholder myths. We do this not by twisting its words, but by quoting them straight,

tracing their logic, and posing honest questions—queries that test the bridge between model

and world.

Questions of Truth What guides this inquiry? Three simple probes, sharp and unflinching:

- Does the model match the experience—does it capture the ache of standing, the rush of

falling, the tide’s rhythm? - Does the abstraction return us to the world we live in—does it

reflect stability’s press or entropy’s drift as we know them? - Or does it swap our felt truth

for a map of symbols—elegant, precise, yet blind to the terrain beneath our feet?

These aren’t judgments—they’re clarities, a call to see where explanation aligns or strays.

We begin not with scorn, but with openness—ready to hear what was taught, and to weigh

it against what is.

The Gravity We Learned This is the gravity we were handed—the one said to rule planets,

bend light, define mass—a cosmic titan of mathematics. Yet it’s also the gravity that struggles

to explain the mundane: how we stand against its pull, walk its slopes, or drift to sleep under

its weight. What we were told promises mastery over stars, but stumbles over the body’s

3In General Relativity, gravity is modeled as curvature of spacetime rather than a force. See: A. Einstein,

”The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity,” Annalen der Physik, 1916.

23

quiet truths—stability’s imprint, entropy’s shadow. Here, we document that story—not to

end it, but to see it clear, setting the stage for what comes next.

3.9 Evaluating GR Through Everyday Gravity

3.9.1 Testing the Abstract Against the Real

General Relativity (GR) redefined gravity not as a force, but as a geometric feature of

spacetime. This section evaluates how well that abstraction holds up when applied to

observable, everyday gravitational experiences—those cataloged previously. Each entry

below describes a specific gravitational phenomenon, summarizes GR’s interpretation of that

experience, and then identifies how that experience is handled in real-world practice. Where

the model requires force, pressure, or interaction to deliver a result, we also note the reliance

on Newtonian mechanics despite GR’s formal rejection of force4 .

3.9.2 The Feeling of Weight

Gravitational Phenomenon: The persistent downward pressure experienced when standing.

GR Explanation: GR describes weight as the result of resistance to geodesic motion.

Standing on Earth’s surface means the body is prevented from falling freely; the ground

accelerates upward in spacetime, creating the sensation of weight via the equivalence principle.

Applied Framework: Real-world force computations use F = mg5 to determine body

weight, material tolerances, or pressure points—requiring Newtonian formulation. GR supplies

no mechanism to compute field-based interaction.

3.9.3 The Relief of Lying Down

Gravitational Phenomenon: Change in bodily sensation and pressure when shifting from

standing to horizontal posture.

GR Explanation: No direct explanation; curvature is posture-independent.

Applied Framework: Redistribution of weight and pressure is evaluated using Newtonian

force models. Biomechanics depend on P = F/A to quantify changes.

3.9.4 Balance as a Constant Process

Gravitational Phenomenon: Continuous muscular and sensory adjustment required to

remain upright.

4Charles W. Misner, Kip S. Thorne, and John Archibald Wheeler. Gravitation. W. H. Freeman, 1973

5Isaac Newton. Philosophie Naturalis Principia Mathematica. Translated editions commonly cited for

historical context. Royal Society, 1687

24

GR Explanation: Standing is modeled as resistance to deviation from a geodesic path, not

a direct force interaction.

Applied Framework: Stability analysis requires torque calculations and vector forces.

Vestibular response depends on Newtonian gravity g for calibration.

3.9.5 Motion Requires Resistance Management

Gravitational Phenomenon: Effort and muscular energy required to lift, walk, or ascend.

GR Explanation: GR provides no field-based resistance; motion is along curved spacetime

unless acted upon.

Applied Framework: Force, work, and energy cost computed via Newtonian models:

W = F ・ d. GR does not quantify muscular load.

3.9.6 Inversion Increases Discomfort

Gravitational Phenomenon: Head pressure, disorientation, and vascular strain during

inversion.

GR Explanation: No explicit mechanism. Gravity lacks fixed direction in GR; discomfort

is labeled physiological.

Applied Framework: Fluid dynamics rely on P = ρgh6. Newtonian down-vector is required

to calculate effects.

3.9.7 Falling Feels Different From Jumping

Gravitational Phenomenon: Sensory difference between surrendering to gravity and

resisting it.

GR Explanation: Both paths are geodesics7; differences are not modeled.

Applied Framework: Energy, acceleration, and perceived pressure shifts require Newtonian

mechanics. Directional force change is modeled via ΔF.

3.9.8 Bracing for Impact

Gravitational Phenomenon: Reflexive muscular preparation before landing or collision.

GR Explanation: No explanation within GR. Anticipated force interactions lie outside

curvature-based modeling.

6Standard hydrostatic pressure equation from fluid mechanics, using Newtonian gravity.

7Geodesics are the ’straightest’ possible paths in curved spacetime and represent free-fall trajectories in

General Relativity.

25

Applied Framework: Force anticipation modeled via F = Δp/Δt8. Newtonian momentum

transfer governs responses.

3.9.9 Fatigue from Standing Still

Gravitational Phenomenon: Progressive exhaustion during upright posture without

motion.

GR Explanation: Labeled as a muscular issue. No gravitational mechanism applies.

Applied Framework: Pressure, tension, and support modeling all require Newtonian force

persistence. P = F/A is used.

3.9.10 Weightlessness Feels Wrong

Gravitational Phenomenon: Disorientation, nausea, and physiological change in zero-G.

GR Explanation: In orbit, gravity is present but unperceived due to geodesic motion. No

net force acts.

Applied Framework: Vestibular response and loss of baseline force reference must be

modeled as absence of Newtonian field interaction.

3.9.11 Touch, Pressure, and Gravity

Gravitational Phenomenon: Sensory experience of weight, pressure, and surface force.

GR Explanation: Gravity is not modeled as directly felt; interaction is electromagnetic.

Applied Framework: All pressure modeling involves Newtonian calculations. GR lacks

interface language between curvature and tactile feedback.

3.9.12 Pendulum Motion and Swinging

Gravitational Phenomenon: Oscillation under gravity’s pull.

GR Explanation: Approximated as a geodesic.

Applied Framework: Period calculated using T = 2π

p

L/g9—a Newtonian equation

dependent on local g.

3.9.13 Breathing and Postural Pressure

Gravitational Phenomenon: Respiratory resistance variation with body orientation.

8Impulse-momentum theorem: change in momentum over time equals force. Rooted in classical Newtonian

mechanics.

9Pendulum period formula derived using Newtonian gravitational acceleration.

26

GR Explanation: Not modeled.

Applied Framework: Lung mechanics use vertical pressure differential P = ρgh10.

3.9.14 Hair and Clothing Drape

Gravitational Phenomenon: Downward orientation of soft structures.

GR Explanation: Assumed to follow curved geodesics11.

Applied Framework: F = mg12 governs hang and tension. GR does not define directional

field vectors.

3.9.15 A Catalog Unmet

These counterclaims—from weight’s ache to hair’s fall—pit GR against experience. Stability’s

press and entropy’s pull weave our world—yet GR offers curves, not causes, leaving the body’s

truths adrift. What we feel demands more—a field, a force, a reality curvature can’t grasp.

3.10 Real-World Design Blind Spots: Buildings, Weight, and Physical

Load

3.10.1 The Unseen Load in Construction

General Relativity (GR) provides a large-scale model of gravitational curvature, but it offers

no tools to model or calculate physical stress, structural load, or pressure accumulation.

These effects, while part of everyday engineering and architecture, fall entirely outside GR’s

scope. This limitation is not disputed within physics; engineers default to Newtonian models

to account for forces, loads, and stress tolerances. This section examines where GR remains

silent and Newton quietly steps back in.

3.10.2 Buildings, Weight, and Real-World Physics

GR Explanation: GR does not address gravitational load-bearing structures. Curvature

does not provide equations for vertical force, pressure distribution, or material fatigue.

Analysis: Structural design requires:

• Load calculations: F = mg13 or P = F/A determine pressure on foundations.

• Uneven settlement modeling over time based on gravity’s continuous downward force.

10Standard hydrostatic pressure equation from fluid mechanics, using Newtonian gravity.

11Geodesics are the ’straightest’ possible paths in curved spacetime and represent free-fall trajectories in

General Relativity.

12Newton, Philosophie Naturalis Principia Mathematica

13See 12

27

• Directional stress on glass, brick, steel—forces aligned with gravity’s vector.

GR does not participate in this modeling. The effects are modeled using Newtonian field-based

mechanics, not curvature geometry.

3.10.3 A Blindness to Stability’s Craft

Despite its reputation, GR is absent from real-world design. It does not model the pressure

that causes compression, tension, or material failure. Every engineering system that addresses

weight, load, or stress defaults to Newtonian mechanics. This exclusion reveals the abstract

nature of GR’s formulation. It offers no tools for stability analysis, despite gravity’s central

role in every structure we inhabit.

3.11 Celestial Phenomena Reexamined: GR’s Explanations in

Practice

3.11.1 Scrutinizing the Cosmic Throne

GR’s greatest claims lie in celestial mechanics—planetary orbits, time dilation, tidal effects,

and black holes. In these domains, the theory is widely accepted and appears to match

observational data. However, when we examine the explanatory mechanisms behind GR’s

claims, a similar issue emerges: it provides descriptions without causes. Geometry replaces

interaction, and wherever force, pressure, or field modeling becomes necessary, Newton’s

equations often reappear to fill in the gaps.

3.11.2 Tides

GR Explanation: Earth experiences a gradient in spacetime curvature14 near the Moon,

leading to bulging water levels.

Problem: The effect is routinely modeled with Newtonian field gradients, which predict

fluid motion and timing. GR does not model fluid dynamics or offer a vector force for water

movement.

3.11.3 Orbits

GR Explanation: Objects follow geodesics15 around masses—natural, curvature-shaped

paths.

Problem: GR does not account for speed maintenance, angular momentum transfer, or orbit

formation. Newtonian models supply F = mv2/r to analyze orbital velocity.

14In General Relativity, gravity is modeled as curvature of spacetime rather than a force. See: A. Einstein,

”The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity,” Annalen der Physik, 1916.

15Geodesics are the ’straightest’ possible paths in curved spacetime and represent free-fall trajectories in

General Relativity.

28

3.11.4 Rings and Belts

GR Explanation: Structures like Saturn’s rings reflect gravitational balance.

Problem: Their precise spacing and structure are modeled using Newtonian resonance and

force equations. GR provides no pressure-based cause for pattern formation.

3.11.5 Moon’s Synchronous Rotation

GR Explanation: Tidal locking arises from torque in gravitational interaction.

Problem: GR has no torque model. Angular momentum transfer requires force and

resistance—supplied by Newtonian gravity.

3.11.6 Lagrange Points

GR Explanation: Balanced points arise between gravitationally interacting bodies.

Problem: GR does not calculate Lagrange point positions. Newtonian vector addition

defines stability regions.

3.11.7 Binary Star Orbits

GR Explanation: Two stars follow curved geodesics16 around a shared center.

Problem: GR cannot model the forces binding or forming the binary system. Mutual gravity

and orbital stability are modeled using Newtonian mechanics.

3.11.8 Galactic Cluster Dynamics

GR Explanation: Mass warps space, curving paths across intergalactic distances.

Problem: GR’s predictions require dark matter to explain observed speeds.17 It lacks a

field-based model of distributed gravitational influence. Newtonian expectations are patched

with hypothetical mass.

3.11.9 Roche Limit Effects

GR Explanation: Objects near large planets break apart due to curvature gradients.

Problem: Tidal force modeling and structural breakdown are Newtonian. GR has no

mechanism to predict internal cohesion failure.

16Geodesics are the ’straightest’ possible paths in curved spacetime and represent free-fall trajectories in

General Relativity.

17Vera C. Rubin, W. Kent Ford, and N. Thonnard. “Rotational properties of 21 SC galaxies with a large

range of luminosities and radii, from NGC 4605 /R = 4kpc/ to UGC 2885 /R = 122 kpc/”. In: Astrophysical

Journal 238 (1980), pp. 471–487

29

3.11.10 Gravitational Time Dilation

GR Explanation: Time slows near stronger gravitational fields.18

Problem: The effect is measurable and real, but GR provides only mathematical curvature.

No explanation exists for why mass alters the experience of time.

3.11.11 A Fractured Cosmic Tale

Across solar and galactic scales, GR’s descriptions often match observational data—but fail to

offer causal mechanisms. Time, motion, orbit, and pressure are described through curvature,

not explained. When answers require interaction, GR turns silent—and Newton returns.

These gaps expose the need for a model that describes what gravity actually does—not just

how it curves space.

3.12 Gravity Observed

3.12.1 A Complete Ledger of Influence

This catalog now stands as a full account of gravity’s observable presence—from the most

intimate experiences of bodily weight to the most distant phenomena of galactic structure.

We have mapped what gravity does before asking what it is. From fatigue in standing to the

binding of binary stars, from the rise of tides to the curvature of ocean surfaces, we have

honored the evidence—gathered not through theory, but through observation. These effects

span all scales of human and cosmic life. They demand recognition by any theory that seeks

to explain reality.

3.12.2 The Authority of Observation

Our commitment throughout has been to observation first. Gravity is not something we need

to imagine—we live inside it. Every experience involving posture, structure, balance, or orbit

already testifies. We do not begin with explanation. We begin with phenomena. We do not

look to confirm a model—we look to describe a world. These entries—physical, biological,

structural, celestial—are not theoretical constructs. They are realities that a theory must

match or fail.

3.12.3 The Challenge Before Us

Having compiled these lived and measurable gravitational effects, we now place them before

the established frameworks. Newtonian mechanics must account for pressures, drapes, tides,

impacts. General Relativity must show how geometry alone produces pressure, displacement,

structural fatigue, or orbital formation. Every claim to explain gravity must address this

full spectrum—from the ground beneath our feet to the black hole at a galaxy’s core. We’ve

added no conjecture—only the consistent demand that models not ignore the real.

18R. V. Pound and G. A. Rebka. “Gravitational Red-Shift in Nuclear Resonance”. In: Physical Review

Letters 3.9 (1959), pp. 439–441. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.3.439

30

3.12.4 A Threshold, Not a Finale

This conclusion is not a final word—it is a point of departure. We end the catalog here

and begin our comparison. Next, we examine what we were told. Then, we test General

Relativity against what has been observed. From that testing, a new framework will arise.

Not by dismissing what came before, but by building from where it ended. Gravity is not a

symbol or an equation—it is what stands behind standing, what acts through pressure, what

reveals itself in swing and orbit. The time has come to question—not abstractly, but with

everything we’ve seen in hand.

31

References

Einstein, Albert. “Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation”. German. In: Sitzungsberichte der

K¨oniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (1915). In German, pp. 844–847.

Misner, Charles W., Kip S. Thorne, and John Archibald Wheeler. Gravitation. W. H. Freeman,

1973.

Newton, Isaac. Philosophie Naturalis Principia Mathematica. Translated editions commonly

cited for historical context. Royal Society, 1687.

Pound, R. V. and G. A. Rebka. “Gravitational Red-Shift in Nuclear Resonance”. In: Physical

Review Letters 3.9 (1959), pp. 439–441. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.3.439.

Rubin, Vera C., W. Kent Ford, and N. Thonnard. “Rotational properties of 21 SC galaxies

with a large range of luminosities and radii, from NGC 4605 /R = 4kpc/ to UGC 2885

/R = 122 kpc/”. In: Astrophysical Journal 238 (1980), pp. 471–487.

32

People of the World - Logo
Explore with People of the World

Explore with People of the World

© 2025 Website Designed by POW Productions

bottom of page