Claus Birkholz: 5 books

Book cover of Where Einstein had failed

Where Einstein had failed

A compendium of New Physics

by Claus Birkholz
Language: English
Release Date: January 9, 2017

   Einstein's revolutionary ideas had been suffering from his rudimentary mathematical knowledge beyond the domain of differential geometry. Thus, he never recognised the invariants of his General Relativity, and he never had been able to formulate his "World Formula".    Hence,...
Book cover of New Physics

New Physics

Dawn of Cognition

by Claus Birkholz
Language: English
Release Date: December 31, 2013

The "Standard Models" out of date and inconsistent, and string/brane models still "beyond" them - long since they reached their ends. A New Physics must come. Marrying Planck's quantum theory with Einstein's General Relativity, the author is presenting a consistent Quantum Gravity....
Book cover of Cognition based on Quantum Gravity

Cognition based on Quantum Gravity

The Interface of Physics towards Philosophy

by Claus Birkholz
Language: English
Release Date: April 19, 2016

     Philosophy would not be worth a penny if it would be contradicting natural sciences, and the same holds true for the sciences if they would be in conflict with nature. The claim of natural sciences is it to map nature. For consistency, hence, the author, here, is outlining the last frontiers...
Book cover of ToE; New Physics explaining our world by Quantum Gravity
by Claus Birkholz
Language: English
Release Date: January 8, 2016

     Space, time, matter - what really is all that? What are charges, what flavours? What is preventing time from running backwards? Quantum Gravity is describing all that - consisely, comprehensively, to the point. The Grand Unified Theory (GUT = ToE = "Theory of Everything"), finally,...
Book cover of Quantum Gravity

Quantum Gravity

Reasoning with New Physics

by Claus Birkholz
Language: English
Release Date: January 9, 2018

The reproducibility of facts is the hallmark of a natural science, the impossibility of counting up to infinity that of a measuring process, and the "law of great numbers" that of statistics. A statement like "Nothing will come from nothing, and nothing gets lost" will yield conservation...
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