My study on the configuration of fundamental symmetry of nature as an assembly of five regular tetrahedrons and the delineation of the geometry and mathematics derived from its projected picture as square or equilateral triangular aggregates in a plane, and the initial attempts to apply those to explain different scientific phenomena started about twelve years ago. Sixteen papers on the subject were published at different times during this period. The earlier papers were however very abstract in nature. Any new idea before it assumes concrete shape or form must have an abstract beginning. Law of symmetry itself demands this. It takes considerable time and effort to make that clearly intelligible to others.
The initial attempts in earlier papers to present the new ideas and the applications by adopting conventional language, expressions and terminologies did not prove very effective. If an idea happens to be unconventional, to present that in objective perspective requires evolution of appropriate terminology and expression in language, so that others can understand without difficulty. But, in the absence of readily available words and phrases which could exclusively suit the expression of the ideas without giving any chance of dual interpretations and significances, if one be forced to use words and expressions in those expositions which are commonly used in different sense or context in conventional thinking and approaches, then the whole exposition is bound to become abstract. The situation becomes worse when these ideas, containing new elements not in vogue in conventional thinking, have had to be set in propagation in an atmosphere where working system derived from experience and observations have been established, conventions and procedures have been generated and employment of those as instrument of study and investigation has provided apparently convincing answers to facts of observations of scientific phenomena.
Symmetry is recognised as a universal theme. It is indeed the most all-pervasive property of the universe in as much as the entire universal nature is symmetrical. Nature and symmetry in essence are synonymous.
Symmetry (and therefore universal nature) has configuration of its own as well as its geometry and mathematics. On the basis of these basic premises and employing these as the main instruments of application and assessment, when the universe as a whole and the natural phenomena within it are analysed, the knowledge that is generated is the 'science based on symmetry' which forms the subject matter of the present work. The nature of this science, however, is different, in many essentials, from conventional or modern science which has its roots in different contexts of basic premises and fundamentals.
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