John Michael Strubhart

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Take a bucket filled with water, hang it by a rope, twist the rope tightly so that it’s ready to unwind, and let it go. At first, the bucket starts to spin but the water inside remains fairly stationary; the surface of the stationary water stays nice and flat. As the bucket picks up speed, little by little its motion is communicated to the water by friction, and the water starts to spin too. As it does, the water’s surface takes on a concave shape, higher at the rim and lower in the center,
The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality
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