Difference between revisions of "A Portal Special Presentation- Geometric Unity: A First Look"

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<p>[01:21:00] So that's one of the things we get for our Levi-Civita connection, but because the gauge group is going to go missing, this has terrible properties from with respect to the gauge group. It almost looks like a representation. But, in fact, if we let the gauge group act, there's going to be an affine shift.
<p>[01:21:00] So that's one of the things we get for our Levi-Civita connection, but because the gauge group is going to go missing, this has terrible properties from with respect to the gauge group. It almost looks like a representation. But, in fact, if we let the gauge group act, there's going to be an affine shift.


<p>[01:21:21] Furthermore, as we've said before the ability to use projection operators together with the gauge group, is frustrated by virtue of the fact that these two things do not commute with each other. So now the question is, how are we going to prove that we're actually making a good trade?
<p>[01:21:21] Furthermore, as we've said before, the ability to use projection operators together with the gauge group, is frustrated by virtue of the fact that these two things do not commute with each other. So now the question is, how are we going to prove that we're actually making a good trade?


===== Intrinsic Field Content =====
<p>[01:21:48] [The] first thing we need to do is we still have the right to choose intrinsic field content. [We] have an intrinsic field theory. So, if you consider the structure bundle of the spinors; we built the chimeric bundle, so we can define Dirac spinors on the chimeric bundle if we're in Euclidean signature. A 14-dimensional manifold has Dirac spinors of dimension-two to the dimension of the space divided by two.
<p>[01:21:48] [The] first thing we need to do is we still have the right to choose intrinsic field content. [We] have an intrinsic field theory. So, if you consider the structure bundle of the spinors; we built the chimeric bundle, so we can define Dirac spinors on the chimeric bundle if we're in Euclidean signature. A 14-dimensional manifold has Dirac spinors of dimension-two to the dimension of the space divided by two.


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