Now that we have at long last discovered the reality of the golden mean in quantum mechanics and high energy physics, we should recall the true history of this momentous discovery of one of the most amazing principles ever found combining art and science on a fundamental level. It was Mohamed El Naschie who discovered the fundamental role of the golden mean in high energy physics for the first time using golden geometry he was able to explain rationally the two slit experiment. A book which just appeared in World Scientific summarizes all this discoveries. The book is entitled: The Mathematics of Harmony. The author is academician Alexey Stakhov, the renowned mathematician and engineer. It is edited by the American Philosopher Scott Olsen. Some have proposed Stakhov for a Nobel prize based on this publication. Another noteworthy book based on Mohamed El Naschie’s work is that of Leonard Wapner entitled: The Pea and the Sun published by A.K. Peters Ltd, Wellesley, Massachusetts. It is only fair to mention that Mohamed El Naschie’s discovery would have been unthinkable without the work of Garnett Ord and Laurent Nottale in fractal spacetime. The profound question is now how did the golden mean enter into fractal spacetime. The answer is extremely simple. It is through Maulden Williams theorem. This theorem was used for the first time in quantum mechanics by El Naschie. The theorem states that a random cantor set will always have with a probability equal 1 the golden mean as the Hausdorff dimension. Since spacetime is nothing but an infinite collection of random cantor sets, it follows that the mathematical building blocks of quantum mechanics and quantum gravity is the golden mean. It sounds unlikely, esoteric or even crazy, but it is not. If it would be it wouldn’t have been discovered experimentally.
Now that we have at long last discovered the reality of the golden mean in quantum mechanics and high energy physics, we should recall the true history of this momentous discovery of one of the most amazing principles ever found combining art and science on a fundamental level. It was Mohamed El Naschie who discovered the fundamental role of the golden mean in high energy physics for the first time using golden geometry he was able to explain rationally the two slit experiment. A book which just appeared in World Scientific summarizes all this discoveries. The book is entitled: The Mathematics of Harmony. The author is academician Alexey Stakhov, the renowned mathematician and engineer. It is edited by the American Philosopher Scott Olsen. Some have proposed Stakhov for a Nobel prize based on this publication. Another noteworthy book based on Mohamed El Naschie’s work is that of Leonard Wapner entitled: The Pea and the Sun published by A.K. Peters Ltd, Wellesley, Massachusetts. It is only fair to mention that Mohamed El Naschie’s discovery would have been unthinkable without the work of Garnett Ord and Laurent Nottale in fractal spacetime. The profound question is now how did the golden mean enter into fractal spacetime. The answer is extremely simple. It is through Maulden Williams theorem. This theorem was used for the first time in quantum mechanics by El Naschie. The theorem states that a random cantor set will always have with a probability equal 1 the golden mean as the Hausdorff dimension. Since spacetime is nothing but an infinite collection of random cantor sets, it follows that the mathematical building blocks of quantum mechanics and quantum gravity is the golden mean. It sounds unlikely, esoteric or even crazy, but it is not. If it would be it wouldn’t have been discovered experimentally.