Rethinking Chemistry

Ilexa Yardley
The Circular Theory
2 min readMar 10, 2018

Hydrogen, when burned, produces oxygen.

Every element the same element. (Galaxy by Philip Stewart)

Hydrogen, when burned, produces water. Otherwise known, in simple terms, as oxygen. This proves (and means) there is a circular relationship between hydrogen and oxygen, making all of the other elements ‘possible.’

To understand reality it is important to notice the redundancy in nature. That is, there are many ways to symbolize the reproductive nature of nature. All identifications processed by a human, including, and, especially, chemistry, involve the reproduction of a circle. Why?

Zero and one are X and Y is circumference and diameter. No getting around this. So, in chemistry, we move from a linear understanding to a circular understanding of ‘elements.’ Moving past the half-time-erroneous idea counting systems articulate reality.

The only element without a neutron: hydrogen. Explaining why we have all the other elements (any other element). In human terms, anger produces sadness (fire produces water). Without either we could not have both (without both we could not have either).

A human mimics (most conserve) the basic relativity (circularity) in nature.

This explains the composition of any item (and, also the structure). The basis for a bond (in chemistry, and, also, relationships). It all conserves, and, therefore, depends upon, a circle. Meaning a circle (two-not-one) is the most basic dynamic (element) in nature.

It looks like this:

X and Y (zero and one).

Conservation of the circle is the basis for chemistry (physics, mathematics) (psychology) (etc.) All systems. Disciplines. Symbolic representations of nature.

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