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It's in the nature of humans to dispute and conquer. Bombs would get bigger no matter what physics principles the universe abode by.
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You keep playing with your "space-time" ideas dreaming up whatever "theory" tickles your fantasy -- I'll stick to reality (and keep building s--t in the real world that works on the principles that apply in the real physical world.) |
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That's the point. There's a gap between the large world (what you see and feel and touch) and the quantum world. Newton's laws don't apply in the quantum world, yet, there is evidence that the quantum world exists and functions everywhere.
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Perhaps the idea that "Newton's laws don't apply in the quantum [sub-atomic] world" is based upon an error? What if there is a failure to recognize that there is some other interaction (some other matter/matter in motion) forcing sub-atomic particles to behave in the apparent "non-Newtonian" way that they do? But now we're getting close to the whole reason the field of physics was attacked, and largely destroyed, in the first part of the 20th century.... Knowledge is power; destroy certain bases of knowledge -- like theoretical physics -- supplanting them with mysticism, and you succeed in keeping people "in the dark" and "unpowerful." |
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this sort of mumbo-jumbo is why scientists do tests before adopting some mere idea
and that brings us back to the big machine -- it allows us to do tests now here is ANOTHER idea - what if compy goes away when he closes his eyes? did he ever really exist? |
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You failed miserably at this little game of yours. You can't even defend your own simple statements. That's sad when a man can't even defend what he's claiming.
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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I feel like I'm defending the 'earth revolves around the sun' theory. This is non-controversial for anyone with a solid understanding of the subject. At the risk of sounding elitist can everyone with degrees in physics from accredited universities raise their hand? ![]()
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1980 911SC Last edited by MrScott; 11-24-2009 at 03:22 PM.. |
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![]() Edit: I think that just makes us BOTH lying idiotic con men...
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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canna change law physics
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Are we talking about global warming?
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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Physcists are wacky. I have PLENTY of evidence.
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-Tom '73 911T MFI - in process of being restored '73 911T MFI - bare bones '87 924S - Keep's the Porsche DNA in my system while the 911 is down. aka "Wolf boy" |
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canna change law physics
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This thread is useful without pictures
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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But we know how to drink. We can manipulate TIME and SPACE and SPACETIME.
We're frigging GODS.
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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Cogito Ergo Sum
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Mike you can only manipulate time and space after all that drinking... and then its all in your head.
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YOU! In the wormhole!
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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My new hobby is showing extremely-religious types these photos, and then tell them that this machine is literally looking into their souls. Oddly enough, not many argue against this, as.... c'mon.. it looks as though it could. It's that bad-ass....
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There's no people in that pic to give it perspective. It's hard to fully realize that you're looking at a donut that is probably 50 feet tall. I've seen the Tevatron, and can only assume that the LHC is larger in all aspects.
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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Cogito Ergo Sum
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Run smooth, run fast
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A few questions for you brainy peeps in this high tech thread...
1) What would happen if a space rock the size of a baseball or larger, going 100,000 MPH, went through the Shuttle or the ISS... specifically, through a pressurized area with astronauts inside it, frollicing in t-shirts? Would it be survivable? Is there some kind of system in the walls that would self-repair the hole/s? Has it ever happened... with, say... a smaller projectile? 2) Let's say that 50-100 years from now some earthlings are off on an interstellar journey at or near the speed of light... or even half that speed. Forget wormhole travel. What's gonna keep the spacecraft from hitting a space rock and having it cut a hole through the craft from nose to tail? Seriously. I don't think we're gonna have a force field to keep the thing safe, are we? Wouldn't that eat up a ton of energy? 2b) Just a manned trip to Mars in a decade or two... couldn't it be completely trashed if it hit a space rock or vice versa? Are these kinds of things just considered "acceptable risks?" If so, my answer is, "BS... not with my tax money."
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- John "We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline." Last edited by Heel n Toe; 11-24-2009 at 08:39 PM.. |
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2) Nothing keeps it from hitting anything. The good thing is there isn't anything out there to hit. Once you are out of the solar system, it's pretty much vacuum. For instance, Voyager 1 is pretty much outside our known solar system by now yet it still sends signals back to earth.. so it hasn't been hit by anything and it's been travelling at 20,000 mph or so for 40 years. 3) Yep... that's an issue. But we went to the moon, and any ship nowdays would be fitted with radar capable or tracking such objects and warning the crew in advance.. The ISS has such a system.
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