Sharky,
Okay, you'll probably kick me for this, but I have spent quite some time reading your article and frankly, it doesn't make any sense to me. I might not fall into the category of people you want (those with "any real intuition and cognitive way of thinking"), but I simply can't grasp what your paper is trying to say.
For example:
"The measurement of zero degrees is equal to 360°³. 360º³ is the cubing of a circle. This action makes a sphere. A sphere has the ability to be measured from its surface in any direction and it will always be a forward motion. A sphere also has two sides, an inside and an outside. The inside is the center and the outside is the sphere."
I just don't get this. What does
"cubing of a circle" mean? How does it make a sphere?
A sphere may have two sides. It may also have one, if it is a solid. If it is hollow, however, or if the sphere is simply a mathematical construct, the boundary of said sphere must be infinite for it to have two sides. It will only have two sides in 3D space.
You state that electrons are created when protons decay into neutrons ("depletes its warp kinetic energy"). You then claim that
"This is why an electron cannot be divided further".
I am not so sure that it is so simple. According to quantum physics, the electron can be perceived as both a particle and a wave. On this web page,
The electron and its properties, the author states that the radius of the electron has never been measured. In fact, it claims the electron seems to have no structure at all. How can you be so sure the electron is a sphere? Please explain.
I am probably reading your theory in the wrong way. And that is my point - while you might expect people to understand just
what your theory is about, you can hardly expect them to understand how it should be applied to the fundamental understanding of mathematics!
Tormod