Upon learning about the work of Jae-Weon Lee

Jae-Weon Lee, Associate Professor, Dept. of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Jungwon University, Goesan-gun, Chungcheongbuk-do, Korea

Publications: Galactic halos as boson stars

References in order of appearance:

Second email: 5 July 2023

Dear Prof. Dr. Jae-Weon Lee:

Two quick questions:  

  1. Might Planck Time be the first unit of time?
  2. Do you know anybody who considers it the very first moment in time?

Thank you.

Most sincerely,

Bruce

PS.  Following your work on this website: https://81018.com/2019/07/08/lee-jae-weon/

First email: Monday, July 8, 2019 @ 9:45 AM

Dear Prof. Dr. Jae-Weon Lee:

My work comes out of the Planck scale, particularly assuming that Planck Time is the first moment of time; and today, the now, is the current expansion. To get to such a conclusion, I applied base-2 exponentiation to the Planck base units. Such a configuration creates 202 notations or doublings that are easily followed: https://81018.com/chart/

It is all so very simple, I have spent years trying to understand why it has been quite so elusive: https://81018.com/what-if/

John Wheeler anticipated something quite simple and logical. Could this be the pathway into that intuition back in 1986?

Your comments or critical review would be profoundly appreciated. Thank you.

Most sincerely,
Bruce

****************
Bruce E. Camber
http://81018.com https://81018.com/simple

“Behind it all is surely an idea so simple, so beautiful, that
when we grasp it — in a decade, a century, or a millennium —
we will all say to each other, how could it have been otherwise?”
– John Archibald Wheeler, 1911-2008, physicist
How Come the Quantum? from New Techniques and Ideas in Quantum Measurement Theory,
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 480, Dec. 1986 (p.304–316), DOI:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1986.tb12434.x

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