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Modern physics, despite its extraordinary predictive success, is fundamentally descriptive rather than foundational. Frameworks such as Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity operate by mapping observed phenomena into mathematical structures—but they do not explain why those structures exist, nor why they are internally consistent.
By Mark HgginsModern physics, despite its extraordinary predictive success, is fundamentally descriptive rather than foundational. Frameworks such as Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity operate by mapping observed phenomena into mathematical structures—but they do not explain why those structures exist, nor why they are internally consistent.