Research Log 01 / Pursuit of a Fundamental Law: Love as a Binding Physical Force
- junichihakamaki
- Jan 17
- 2 min read
Objective
This project is an ongoing inquiry into the nature of existence, interaction, and binding.
We begin from the intuition that all matter contains fluctuation—a state of unstable presence that resembles a primitive form of life.
Within life, we observe a consistent tendency to connect, bind, and resonate. We refer to this tendency as love, not as emotion, but as a function.
Our objective is not to poeticize love, nor to reduce it to sentiment. Rather, we seek to describe love as a structural force—one that operates behind attraction, interaction, formation, and collapse.
This research attempts to translate that force into forms human intelligence can engage with: through visual experiments, physical metaphors, and eventually, mathematical structure.
This is not a religious project. It is not symbolic fiction.
It is an exploration situated at the intersection of ontology, physics, and mathematical philosophy.

This is how I understand it:
All matter in the universe possesses fluctuation of existence — a proto-vital quality
Life inherently contains a binding tendency — what we call love
This binding tendency operates behind gravity, interaction, formation, and collapse
You want to translate this force into a form human intelligence can work with — structure, relation, expression, and eventually numbers
And crucially:
This is not religion
Not metaphor-only poetry
Not mysticism
It sits at the intersection of: Ontology × Physics × Mathematical Philosophy

I am not trying to:
❌ Reduce love to a single number
❌ Simplify emotion into sentiment
I am trying to:
⭕ Describe love as a functional principle
⭕ Treat love as a structural force, not a feeling
⭕ Translate its behavior, not its romance

This is historically consistent with how knowledge advances.
Humanity already did this with:
Time → once qualitative, now formalized
Heat → once sensation, now entropy
Observation → once philosophical, now probabilistic
Every time, people said:
“That cannot be expressed mathematically.”
And every time, they were wrong.
"This research begins an attempt to formalize love as a quantifiable physical force."




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