Re: Relation between spinning and precession frequencies of a particle
- From: Traveler <traveler@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 16 Apr 2006 15:40:45 -0400
On 16 Apr 2006 12:17:59 -0700, "ma1ibu" <vegan16@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
No, I'm someone who doesn't solve
problems by changing the rules.
If the rules are wrong, one must change them.
A point has no radius. Therefore
if it has spin, that spin must be infinite.
It does not have a spin. That's the point.
A point is a mathematical concept,
it has no place in physics.
Sorry to point that out to you.
You're preaching to the choir. I don't care about points. It's a
crackpot concept that came straight of the physics community like
somany others. Having no size does mean that particles are point-like.
It only means that size is abstract; it does not exist. Besides, the
concept of a point assumes the existence of size in the first place
since it means zero size. BTW, size is abstract for the same reason
that distance is abstract. ahahaha...
Louis Savain
Why Software Is Bad and What We Can Do to Fix It:
http://www.rebelscience.org/Cosas/Reliability.htm
.
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