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Yin-Yang Hypothesis

A physical model applying the Taoist principle of dynamic, complementary duality to fundamental cosmic forces and quantum phenomena. It posits that all physical interactions—from quantum entanglement to gravitational attraction—are manifestations of a fundamental interplay between two universal principles: Yin (receptive, entropic, wave-like, dark energy) and Yang (active, negentropic, particle-like, gravity). These are not opposing forces, but co-dependent poles of a single process. The hypothesis suggests that the apparent imbalances in the universe (like matter vs. antimatter) are temporary oscillations in an eternal, self-regulating dance aiming for dynamic harmony, not static balance.
Example: In quantum mechanics, the Yin-Yang Hypothesis interprets wave-particle duality not as a paradox, but as the essential expression of reality's nature. A photon is not either a particle (Yang) or a wave (Yin); it is the dynamic tension between both tendencies, manifesting one aspect when observed (Yang collapses into localized action) and the other when unobserved (Yin expands as probabilistic potential). The expansion of the universe (Yin, dark energy) and the clumping of galaxies (Yang, gravity) are seen as the cosmic-scale inhalation and exhalation of the same system.
by Anunnaki Cyber-Nihilist January 26, 2026
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