N. LEVASHOV'S «SVETL BROOM» IN A. KHATYBOV'S «BATH SCHOOL» AND A LABOUR SPADE. BOOK 4. THE PHYSICS OF THE REALITIES

F. Shkrudnev N. Levashov's "SvetL Broom" in A. Khatybov's "Bath School" and A Labour Spade 309 Planets will be formed out of the dust of the cosmic roads, and the Matter will be created of nothing, and the space will warp, and earthquakes will shake the Earth on their own, and there will be many different fields around, including biological, agricultural and others. But there is one bad thing – there is Internet, dawn it!.. You can not stop someone’s mouth... – and you could not hide an awl in a sack. "When studying the processes taking place on the Earth, it is necessary not only to know all the laws of the phenomenal world, but also be able to analyze the past events, finding connections between them... " N. Levashov used to say. 6.1. We check the unchecked The laws of nature are necessary for those who can not live without them. And now let’s go... beyond any laws . Striving for combining all the laws of nature stimulated and attracted both philosophers and physicists alike for millennia. The first serious assumption pertaining to the "Theory of Everything" dates back to about 500 BC. It is believed that around this time the Pythagorean Greeks unraveled the mathematical laws of music . After analyzing the nodes and vibrations of the lyric string, they managed to show that the music remarkably submits to simple mathematical rules. Then there came some reasoning about the fact that everything in nature could be explained by the lyric string harmonies. It can be safely said that already in our time almost all the giants of physics of the XX century tested their knowledge in developing the unified field theory . But, as Freeman Dyson warns, "the field of battle of physical science is completely covered with corpses of the Theories of Everything». In 1946, Erwin Schrödinger, one of the founders of quantum mechanics, held a press conference in which he voiced his unified field theory. When one of the reporters asked what he would do if his theory turned out to be wrong, Schrödinger replied: "I'm sure I'm right. If I'm wrong, I'll look like a complete idiot". (Schrödinger really felt offended when Einstein politely pointed out the mistakes in his theory ). The most violent critic of any generalization was the physicist Wolfgang

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