87 Intuitive Unification of Macroscopic Curvature and Microscopic Curvature

Bosley Zhang
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2026/04/23
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2 mins read


The Intuitive Unification of Macroscopic and Microscopic Curvature

Spacetime curves. Fields also curve.

For a long time, physics has treated the curvature of macroscopic spacetime and the intrinsic curvature of microscopic fields as two separate paths, each following its own rules, each forming its own system. The macroscopic belongs to general relativity; the microscopic belongs to quantum field theory. Divided by scale, the theories remain separate, unable to merge into one.

I do not seek to overturn existing theories. I only follow my deepest intuition, straight to the foundation of physics: the macroscopic curvature of spacetime and the microscopic intrinsic curvature of fields — though different in appearance — share the same origin.

They are merely the same underlying geometric core, the same essence of curvature, expressed differently at different scales of observation.

If one could become a Planck-scale observer — let us call him the Planckian Homunculus — and step into the deepest reaches of the microscopic world, into the very structure of fields, what he would see and feel at that fundamental level would not be exotic quantum chaos. In its essence, what he would witness is none other than the curvature of spacetime as described by general relativity.

The macroscopic is the magnified appearance; the microscopic is the intrinsic source. Scales may differ, but curvature is not two things.

I am fully aware that this intuitive unification currently lacks rigorous mathematical derivation and dedicated experimental verification.

Yet the path of science has always been: first, intuitive insight; then, mathematical form; finally, experimental test. This chapter records only the most certain intuitive judgment from the depths of my mind — neither grandiose claims nor overstepping the bounds of scholarly humility.

I merely wish to leave this thought — the unification of curvature at its source — written down, awaiting completion by future generations.


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I love science as much as art, logic as deeply as emotion.

I write the softest human stories beneath the hardest sci-fi.

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