It's a shame Kruse isn't familiar with the Reciprocal System... it would eliminate all his "quasi" stuff. Gopi's papers posted on this forum show that "holes" are actually particles in the RS, but non-local to our perception. We only observe/measure linear spatial displacement--holes are temporally displaced, so he actually IS RIGHT about it being a "hole in reality," since it is
inside the unit space boundary and into coordinate time.
Love the idea of cells being semiconductors. Heck, our Sun turned out to be a giant LED, so makes sense to me! It also explains why our technology has such a detrimental effect on life (all life, not just humans with phones glued to their heads).
My thinking went this way... the exciton has a lifetime and exhibits properties similar to the neutron in the RS, which is a combination of an m-proton and c-neutrino. Nehru used simple probability to calculate how long that material-cosmic structure would remain viable, and hit the lifetime of the neutron. In the case of the exciton, the electron must have a
charge to be observable, since it would otherwise be an invisible "rotating unit of space" (we only observe "rotating units of time") that is probably paired with a larger, cosmic particle (the flip-side of the neutron). This implies that it is a
living particle... what we may be looking at here is what I have referred to as a "biophoton" in other posts.
Probability decay (lifetime) occurs when a compound motion becomes incompatible with its environment. The photon, a m-positron/c-electron pair, is stable in the inanimate environment, but breaks apart in living structure--to make excitons. Once could infer that excitions, a biophoton,
would be stable in the living system and not decay until it was brought back into the inanimate realm, such as metal or crystals. Flow of these biophotons through the body may well be the Qi/Ch'i known to Eastern medicine.