Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Quantum Entanglement & Einstein's Spooky Action at a Distance Explained: The Foundational Physics of Quantum Mechanics' Nonlocality & Probability: The Nonlocality of the Fourth Expanding Dimension

Rate this book
THE FOUNDATIONAL PHYSICAL REALITY UNDERLYING QUANTUM NONLOCALITY & ENTANGLEMENT REVEALED!

“More intellectual curiosity, versatility and yen for physics than Elliot McGucken’s I have never seen in any senior or graduate student. . . Originality, powerful motivation, and a can-do spirit make me think that McGucken is a top bet.” --Dr. John Archibald Wheeler, Princeton University’s Joseph Henry Professor of Physics

There exist many excellent books on Quantum Entanglement, but so far, none of them have presented a *physical* means nor mechanism accounting for quantum entanglement.

What is quantum entanglement? Why is entaglement? How is quantum entanglement? All these questions, and many more banished ones, are asked and answered in this revolutionary book which humbles itself before the giants of the quantum ranging from Planck, to Einstein, to Bohr, to Schrodinger, to Heisenberg, to Dirac, to Wheeler, to Feynman.

How is it, exactly, that two photons sharing a common origin can yet remain entangled no matter how far apart they travel? How can two photons separated by the width of our galaxy yet be connected in such a manner so that measuring one of them *instantaneously* influences the other?

While no useful information can yet be transferred faster than the velocity of light, both quantum theory and dozens quantum experiments now exalt the physical effect of entanglement’s instantaneous influence which travels faster than light.

How can this be? What is entanglement's deeper source? What physical mechanism underlies quantum nonlocality? What foundational physical reality exalts entanglement?

Dr. E turns towards his Princeton days working with the Noble J.A. Wheeler and Nobel Laureate Joseph Taylor, and he invokes the geometry a fourth dimension expanding at the rate of c relative to the three spatial dimensions. The expansion distributes locality into nonlocality, so that even as two photons travel apart from a common origin, they yet remain entangled as they share a common locality exalted by the fourth expanding dimension.

At long last, a *physical* mechanism is presented which accounts for quantum nonlocality and entanglement.

And it turns out that this very same *physical* mechanism of a fourth expanding dimension also accounts for special and general relativity, time and all its arrows and asymmetries, and the second law of thermodynamics, as well as quantum probability, which is shown to walk hand-in-hand with quantum nonlocality and entanglement.

Albert A theory is the more impressive the greater is the simplicity of its premises (dx4/dt=ic), the more different are the kinds of things it relates (relativity, the quantum, time, dark matter, dark energy, entanglement) and the more extended the range of its applicability.

Sir Isaac Truth is ever to be found in simplicity (dx4/dt=ic), and not in the multiplicity and confusion of things (string theory’s 40+ dimensions, multiverse mania).

Albert Any intelligent fool can make things bigger (the multiverse), more complex (the string theorists’ landscape), and more violent (the multiverse televangelist’s violence against simple Truth and Beauty). It takes a touch of genius—and a lot of courage—to move in the opposite direction (dx4/dt=ic).

Recently the LIGO/VIRGO collaboration detected the existence of gravitational waves, thusly affirming Einstein's predictions that the geometry of the space-time dimensions bend, curve, and move. Einstein’s general relativity showed that space-time was not just a stage, but that it was part of the performance, as it too could move in arbitrary manners.

Gravitational waves propagate via undulations of space and time. LTD Theory builds upon this firm foundation of mobile dimensions by postulating and proving that the fourth dimension is expanding at the rate of c relative to the three spatial dimensions, as given by x4=ict which naturally implies dx4/dt=ic.

340 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 9, 2017

28 people are currently reading
9 people want to read

About the author

Elliot McGucken

23 books6 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2 (25%)
4 stars
1 (12%)
3 stars
1 (12%)
2 stars
1 (12%)
1 star
3 (37%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
1 review
November 1, 2017
This is the first time I've written a review. This book is totally useless. It is mostly the author saying how great he is, while repeating quotes actual scientists have made concerning physics. This is literally the first book (of over 150) that I downloaded to my Kindle that I gave up on reading--I got to about 20% through and couldn't take it any more. I then looked up the author on Wikipedia, and found that they deleted his entry. It is not worth the time to download.
6 reviews
November 2, 2017
Interesting new theory presented via a well-told story. Author was inspired by the successful physicists of yore, such as Feynman, Einstein, and Newton who actually advanced physics. The one quote that stuck with me was Max Born stating that physicists must make models of the world based on observation, and that is the theme of the book, where the model of a fourth expanding dimension begets quantum nonlocality and thus entanglement. Reading his other book on time and its arrows, which are also shown to arise from his equation of the fourth expanding dimension dx4/dt=ic. Different from other contemporary books as it steers clear of failed strings and multiverses.
701 reviews3 followers
July 10, 2025
Do not bother reading/listening to this "book".

In print this book is 340 pages...easily 50% could be deleted as the author repeats quotes from other physicist over and over and over and over and over and over. An additional 10% could be ripped out as he also uses the same diagrams repeatedly. Then, remove the 10% or so which includes his comments about how great he is, and of course, the intolerable amount of times he repeats the same equations.
Which leaves you with about maybe 20-25% of actual material, but by the time it rarely rises above the surface, the reader really no longer cares.

Additional negative. (Audible Version) It is narrated by AI, which reads all the hyperlinks used in the book.

More negative? Yes, there is more. Here we have a scientist allegedly of some repute using Wikipedia as a source of information. 'Nuff said.

If I could assign a negative number for a rating, I gladly would.


Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.