In contemporary particle physics, the masses of fundamental particles are
incalculable constants, being supplied by experimental values. Inspired by
observation of the empirical particle mass spectrum, and their corresponding
physical interaction couplings, we propose that the masses of elementary
particles arise solely due to the self-interaction of the fields associated
with the charges of a particle. A first application of this idea is seen to
yield correct order of magnitude predictions for neutrinos, charged leptons and
quarks. We then discuss more ambitious models, where also different generations
may arise from \textit{e.g.} self-organizing bifurcations due to the underlying
non-linear dynamics, with the coupling strength acting as "non-linearity"
parameter. If the model is extended to include gauge bosons, the photon is
automatically the only fundamental particle to remain massless as it has no
charges. It results that gluons have an effective range ∼1fm, physically
explaining why QCD has finite reach.Comment: 18 page