Unless you have a relevant citation your "theory" does not hold weight.
You make an assumption there is an applicable reflective surface.
Does Inverse Square hold up if no reflective surface exists?
I did enjoy your comparison to fiber but that's a whole different set of laws and statistical probability. The surface properties (e.g. diffraction) in fiber do not exist in open air. You could use optics to create a collimated beam to nullify the inverse square law but that would not work well for the plants.
when you reflect light back into the same space
First you must calculate the energy of the photons that come directly from the point source(s) to the target points.
If it were possible to calculate reflection probabilities to each target point, taking scatter, absorption, transmittance, phase of the photon into consideration it still will not nullify Inverse Square Law of the direct photon paths. You sum the reflected photon energy with the direct energy. Both the direct and reflected waves must follow the Inverse Square Law, there are no exceptions.
ISL is a basic elementary law of physics and reflection is extremely complex. Reflected waves are measured not calculated (estimated) due to the complexity.
You need to understand a photon is an oscillating sub-atomic particle. It's not like a ball bouncing off a surface. It's reflecting off the energy of an atom not a flat surface.
According to inverse square almost no light would reach the plants from that far. Yet somehow it works.
What? I mean seriously. What is so different about a greenhouse light that it can defy an elemental law of physics? It somehow works because it does. Maybe you are missing the summation of the photon energy from of all the fixtures rather than the light directly above the target point. If the target point is receives photons from every light where the path is unimpeded. Greenhouse light is supplemental to solar and is not expected replace solar.
That link only contains utter nonsense.
Really? Come on now. It's a simple table with Inverse Square calculations. Many here should find it quite handy when adjusting light height and intensity.
I checked a few of the calculations and they appeared to be correct. I do not understand why you would refer to ISL as utter nonsense.
It's not fair to the readers of your opinion without explaining how your theory is superior to that of Einstein, Planck, and Feynman.
I need more than faith than you are correct. Faith is believing what you know ain't so. Nobody deserves to be helped who don't try to work himself, and "faith without work" is a risky doctrine. I'm sorry I cannot take your theory on faith, you must include citations and a valid argument. Just because you say ISL is not applicable is not proof.