Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: Sam Wormley <swormley1@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 12 May 2009 14:46:57 GMT
Dennis Sue... wrote:
On May 12, 3:50 am, Benj <bjac...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:On May 11, 7:58 pm, mpc755 <mpc...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On May 11, 2:10 pm, PD <TheDraperFam...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Well obviously nobody would use the term "magic" but it's what youThere is no magic. The fact that a phenomenon does not fit into your
preconceived notions of permissible possibilities does not constitute
magic.
mean. When you want to "explain" something when logic and reason has
failed you.
The fact that you do not understand that a wave, or a disturbance, orThis is correct except for the term "massless particle". A "wave" is a
a massless particle, or a propagating energy field cannot exist in a
void shows what is the major problem in physics today and that is
mathematicians who do not understand nature.
disturbance. And that "disturbance" is a propagating energy field.
Hence it logically follows that a "wave" is a PROPERTY of something
else: the thing doing the "waving". So how can behavior be separated
from the thing that the behavior is describing and have one assert
that the behavior alone is an actual real object. This is patent
nonsense.
===========
Obviously a particle can travel through the void without a
problem, but to say a wave can is pure bunk.
===========
Why is that obvious? It seems obvious that shot
should roll out the mouth of Elmer Fudds blunderbuss
and land on his foot.
Weaeey?
.
- References:
- Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: Michael Helland
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: PD
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: mpc755
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: PD
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: mpc755
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: PD
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: mpc755
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: PD
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: mpc755
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: PD
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: mpc755
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: Benj
- Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- From: Sue...
- Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- Prev by Date: Invariant of a helicoid, like an electron but not quite.
- Next by Date: "A Snapshot of a Photon"
- Previous by thread: Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- Next by thread: Re: Sometimes I wonder, if Physicists actually *want* to know how it works
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|