J Mark Morris is an individual. Mark's hobby is mapping the basis of nature, a Euclidean void populated with immutable point charges (electrino and positrino), to the current state of modern physics. Mark's view is that nature is best understood based upon this foundation. This conception of nature leads to new narratives, models, and hypothesis in physics and cosmology based upon a fundamental assumption of two equal and opposite, immutable, point charges, the electrino and the positrino. The electrino has -1/6 charge, and the positrino has +1/6 charge. You can imagine that there is some natural law that no two point charges may approach closer than a certain natural distance. The ongoing effort is to show that this physical model, called Neoclassical Physics and Quantum Gravity, maps in some reasonable way to existing observations and mathematics. The effort also includes some thought on the history and philosophy of science. Mark is not a scholar of any of these subjects by any means. However, it seems that point charges were discarded prematurely in the latter 1800's. The history is vague. Circa this era arose the interpretation that there was no aether. This led to Einstein's geometry of spacetime which imagines that the underlying basis of the universe is actually a void and curvy geometry of both space and time.
Since this is new science, it is not yet widely known, and a consensus has not yet formed. Therefore, I do not modify Wikipedia pages per this new physics/cosmology, per the policy WP:OR against original research. Instead, where appropriate, I plant a flag on a Wikipedia talk page, discussing the implications for the corresponding content page, should the electrino/positrino narrative/model/theory become accepted consensus. J Mark Morris (talk) 19:54, 20 January 2019 (UTC)