I googled this “General Science Journal” since I’d never heard of it before. This is not a peer-reviewed publication. In fact, in the website‘s “Purpose” section, it explicitly states as much—even suggesting that this is somehow a positive:
The original and continued purpose of these pages is to provide an opportunity for public presentation of scientific theories without prior and arbitrary assessment, criticism or rejection by the recipient.
So let’s begin with the understanding that we are talking about a paper that has gone through none of the normal channels that stand as the pillar of good research across every scientific discipline. In fact, anybody who wished to make any tenuous or hokey claim could find a home in a “journal” such as this one.
Secondly, as I said before, questions such as “Does an object exist if it isn’t being measured?” cannot be addressed by quantum theory, for reasons I’ve stated before. Berkeley, Hume, and their current disciples may have all the fun they like, but they are not discussing physics and they are not developing scientific theories.
A theoretical description of some aspect of the physical world should have some sort of formal construction. In fact, any extension (or replacement) of quantum field theory should include quantum theory as some limiting case, considering its vast success in explaining measurable physical phenomena. All good theories should address that which came before. For example, special and general relativity can be mathematically shown to reduce to Newtonian mechanics in the limit that (|velocity|)/(light speed) << 1.
David Bohm, mentioned in this abstract, is one of the lead proponents of non-local hidden variable theories, which I briefly mentioned before. I’ve met physicists who are sort of closet Bohm fans, because they like the kind of physical picture that goes along with the math. Bohmian mechanics is understood today not so much as a true hidden-variable theory as a restatement of quantum mechanics. And kind of a clunky one at that.
Ones doesn’t learn anything new from Bohmian mechanics, nor can it be distinguished from QM in its predictions. As a consequence, it also does nothing to resolve the “spooky action at a distance” that so troubled Einstein about entanglement. (There are those who have more fundamental problems with Bohm’s formulation of QM, but I do not have enough knowledge of this work to comment.)
If anything, Bohmian mechanics re-emphasizes the point I made before about not mistaking the “movie” for the media it’s printed on.
As for Penrose, his work is absolute bologna. He seems to base his theories more on what would sell a book than good science and sound theoretical work. This guy has claimed that it’s not the brain’s neurons which allow it to perform computations, but rather that entangled QM states of molecules in the brain are the workhorse of thought.
Boy, wouldn’t I and a whole community of physicists just love to see an entangled state at room temperature that doesn’t decohere faster than the time it takes to perform the type of calculations Penrose thinks the brain can. It would certainly revolutionize computing as we know it. A former undergrad professor of mine had some fun writing a refutation of this idea. You can find it here.
Some scientists are resurrecting the ether which Einstein had done away with.
As for the ether, I give more credit to Michelson for this one than anyone else, but then, I’m an experimentalist.
Can the centrifugal force of the rotation of the earth be another force affecting nature?
This statement right here should be setting alarm bells off in your head. The centrifugal force arises due to the fact that any acceleration of inertial mass feels indistinguishable from a force to someone inside the accelerating frame. But translating to another, non-accelerating reference frame reveals that these forces are simply the consequences of accelerating the frame of reference. That is, it isn’t a new force causing an object to look like its being deflected, it’s that the apparently constant background in which the object moves is in fact accelerating, making it look like the object is accelerating.
One might as well state that the Coriolis effect represents some fundamental new physics. Also relevant.
As an aside, remember that the word “force” is simply a mathematical definition made up by Newton. It has the units of mass times acceleration. Doesn’t matter if that acceleration is caused by a fundamental interaction (gravity/EM/weak/strong) or simply a consequence of the motion of the object (the spinning earth, for example, causing the acceleration of its surface). One can completely describe Newtonian mechanics in terms of energy with out invoking force at all.
In fact all of modern physics can be represented without once involving a force, instead describing fundamental interactions using fields, either quantum mechanical or classical depending on what you’re interested in looking at.