Fred-Rick
3 min readJan 3, 2024

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You seem to think that the Sun is a single entity, and that when you bake in the Sun you point your face to this single entity far away.

Yet in reality, the photons coming to you are coming from every inch of that enormously large star.

When there is a partial eclipse, and light filters through a tree, then we see the partial eclipse in miniature with the lights shining on the ground under neath the tree.

The moon blocks just those photons that turn the image on the ground into a half-sun (i.e. moon crescent shaped) because the lights to all sides of the blockage are still shining their photons toward planet Earth.

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If this is the last communication, then think how viewing gravity not as a pinpoint force but as a collective force changes the view.

If we flatten the galaxy to a clock, then a star at 4 o'clock is pulled inward by the collective of stars, not by something in the center, because we are talking about 100 billion stars.

The stars closer to 3 and 5 o'clock may cancel out their gravitational pull for this star, just move further to 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 o'clock etcetera, and that entire collective is pulling on that star at 4 o'clock.

So, gravity is not a pinpoint idea in our heads. It is a collective reality in a galaxy.

Meanwhile, the collective reality is circling.

Like a car going too fast in the curve, the tendency of the car will be to go straight. So, we have a pull away from the center by the circular motion, while we have a pull toward the center by the collective gravitational forces of all these stars found distributed throughout the galaxy (with some of these forces canceling each other out).

In the exact center of the galaxy, we have a net-zero position. Yet that will not prevent a star at 10 o'clock to do its pulling on the star at 4 o'clock. The net-zero gravity of the center spot does nothing to change all that gravitational pull coming across it.

Like a wave annihilating an oppositional wave for a second, it will re-emerge right after because the force did not dissipate; it was just in a neutral position.

Once you recognize that gravity is a collective force in a galaxy, then you may finally have the space of mind to entertain the Black Eye model.

I am not saying that the Black Hole model is incorrect. If it weren't for the event horizon, the model would be fine. Now, with the event horizon, we have a weak model; the incredible mass inside the event horizon lacks direct scientific data. It is not there.

So, think about how a single person would not do certain things, but when taken up in a group can end up acting out in ways they would never do if all by themselves or in the small setting of just a family.

Or envision 100 billion stars all pulling on the center (pulling because of the circular motion they are involved in), and then think what could survive in the center of four horses quartering something they all have a hold on.

Why would there be anything in that center? How could there be anything in that center?

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Fred-Rick
Fred-Rick

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