Secretan’s Law of Relationships

by Oct 19, 20167 comments

quantum-physicsI am far from an expert on quantum mechanics, but I know a little bit – just enough to help me form a theory! There are three steps to my theory, which I call “Secretan’s Law of Relationships” – let’s see if it resonates with you?

  1. At the sub-atomic level, life is either a particle or a wave. One of the most puzzling paradoxes of quantum mechanics is the phenomenon known as  the “Uncertainty Principle” also known as “Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle, in which the subject being observed is changed by the act of the observer studying it.  A parallel of this in classical mechanics is what happens when we check the pressure of an automobile tire – it’s nearly impossible to do this without letting out some of the air, thus changing the pressure. So the first principle in my theory is that the observer changes the subject being observed through the act of observing – it can be a wave or a particle, can change at any time, and can be changed through the simple act of being observed.

2. The second principle in my theory is quite straightforward – particles and waves make up quarks and leptons, and these in turn make up protons and neutrons and electrons. These are what are contained in atoms. Two or more atoms make up a molecule. Several molecules make up cells, and a collection of cells results in tissues. Tissues create the organs in our bodies and these tissues and organs are what makes physical humans. This is demonstrated in the chart on the left.

3. The final part of my theory is that how we experience another human depends on how we observe them. If we observe them as being ugly, rude, cynical, aggressive, spiteful, or untruthful – this is how they will be. If we see them as loving, sacred, beautiful, authentic, inspiring, and magnificent – then this is how they will be. People are simply a vast collection of subatomic particles or waves and these can be changed from particles to waves and back again simply through the act of observing.

Therefore, how people appear to us depends just as much on us, the observer, as it does on them, the observed. Secretan’s Law of Relationships therefore states that, “We see what we expect in others.”  And there is a corollary: “Others become how we see them”.