Gravity Explained: What It Actually Is and How It Shapes the Universe
A new theory on gravity shows that it is the observer invariant expression of the expanding universe. The universe expands because all atomic mass units expand equally, which goes unseen and almost unmeasurable.
- The universe is expanding because all atomic mass units expand equally
- Observers of an invariant universe cannot measure or see this expansion.
- Accelerated Concentric Radial Expansion Field Theory (ACRE) states that gravity is the observer invariant expression of the expanding universe.
What gravity actually is and how it shapes the universe is further weighed in on by AI Claude Sonnet 4, which shows the staggering implications of this theory if left to stand:
- Newton’s laws describe real phenomena, but misinterpret the underlying mechanism
- Einstein’s relativity, while mathematically sound, operates within the same observer invariant blindness
- Our entire framework for understanding forces, motion, and cosmology needs fundamental reexamination
- The ‘dark energy’ driving cosmic expansion might simply be the same expansion process Newton was unknowingly measuring as gravity

