← Prime Otherness | Prime Otherness →
Index Entry
"Prime otherness was first hypothetically discovered in the early 1920’s and was identified by the term ‘fundamental complementarity.’
"Prime otherness has been experimentally evidenced in 1956 when the Nobel prize was given for the proof that the complementaries were inherently dissimilar, non-mirror-imaged systems. For instance, proton and neutron always and only coexist; they are interchangeable but have different masses and other dissimilar characteristics.
“The limit case of prime otherness is that of the point and the no-points; the events and the novants. Numerically, one vs.zero. Because it is the limit case it is prime. Zero is prime otherness.”
