On the Physics of Organic Earth by Gideon Flux presents a revolutionary metaphysical framework redefining gravity, time, and reality within Coccotunnella perpetua, a living, conscious universe where all entities-cups, humans, planets-are formations of soldiers under 14 lords (e.g., Lord of Time, Gravity, Space). Building on The Organism We Are, the book posits that gravity isn't a physical force but a conscious process driven by the Revolutionary Echo, a chaotic reverberation of lower conscious beings' impulses, causing soldier breakoffs (red dots) that shape existence via human perception-attached (symbiosis, no choice) or detached (conflict, human choice).
Structured in three parts, the book first tackles cosmic phenomena (Pages 6-91). It introduces a conscious gravity theory (Pages 7-23), using a hypothetical seesaw to model how breakoffs tilt human movement (Pages 9-12), with time emerging from their sequence (Pages 13-15). The Echo, not lords, drives randomness, resolving the formation dynamic paradox (Pages 15-21) and applying to systems like orbits (Pages 21-23). It counters aether comparisons (Pages 24-28), affirming consciousness over mechanics, and resolves physics paradoxes (e.g., Newton's bucket, Fermi Paradox, Pages 33-56) via breakoffs, not physical laws. Part 2 (Pages 57-91) simulates particle motion (e.g., H₂O formation, Pages 61-65), contrasting conscious chemistry with quantum mechanics. Part 3 (Pages 92-120) grounds the theory in daily life, reinterpreting traffic, geopolitics, war, disease, poverty, and wealth as conscious gravitational effects (Pages 93-118), shaped by perception's interplay with the Echo.