Theory of Absolutes - Home. Site Map. Contact Author. Recent Essays. Philosophy of Science. Christian Metaphysics. Mass, Energy, Space, Time. Photonic Phenomena. Field Theory. Particles & Fields. Thermodynamics. Particle Physics. Relativity. Quantum Mechanics. Epilogue. Tutorial Lessons.
The Theory of Absolutes © 2009
by: Thomas Lee Abshier, ND
A philosophical, theological, and science-based exploration of physics and life
A Theory of how God’s principles and Laws underlie the phenomena of:
Particles & Fields, Classical & Quantum Mechanics, and Relativity
A fundamental model of Mass, Energy, Space, and Time
An examination of the logic and purpose motivating the drama of Body, Soul, & Spirit
Note:
Pre-Publication Edition: Contains Duplication, Errata, Incompletely Developed Concepts, and Discarded Hypotheses

Christian Counseling, Naturopathic Medicine, The Christian Nation

The Heavens Declare His Handiwork

Previous Page               Next Page


Thomas Lee Abshier, ND
—-

Author, Speaker
Naturopathic Physician

Christian Counselor

Medical Consultations

Marriage Counseling
Seminars, Speaking
Books, Articles
Audio, Video

(503) 255-9500
drthomas@naturedox.com
Portland, Oregon

Glossary
by: Thomas Lee Abshier, ND
Last Edited: 1/5/2009

Physics (Wikipedia): (Greek: öýóéò (phúsis), “nature” and öõóéêῆ (phusiké), “knowledge of nature”) is the branch of science concerned with the discovery and characterization of universal laws which govern matter, energy, space, and time. The role of physics, then, is to provide a logically ordered picture of nature in agreement with experience.

 

Spirit (Wikipedia): The English word “spirit” comes from the Latin spiritus, meaning “breath” (compare spiritus asper), but also “soul, courage, vigor”, ultimately from a PIE root *(s)peis- (“to blow”). In the Vulgate, the Latin word translates Greek (ðíåõìá), pneuma (Hebrew (רוח) ruah), as opposed to anima, translating psykhç. The word was loaned into Middle English via Old French espirit in the 13th century. In India Prana means breath.  The distinction between soul and spirit became current in Judeo-Christian terminology (e.g. Greek. psykhe vs. pneuma, Latin anima vs. spiritus, Hebrew ruach vs. neshama or nephesh; in Hebrew neshama from the root NSHM or breath.)

Theory of Absolutes - Home. Glossary.