Re: The Cold Equations
- From: "tomcat" <jlavine@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 12 Jan 2006 17:01:36 -0800
Brad Guth wrote:
> >And, a waverider spaceplane becomes . . 'a piece of cake'. Really!
> Now you're starting to get weird again, tomcat.
>
> I'm not even saying that your spaceplane isn't a perfectly good thing,
> or that little (aka extremely little) Martians are not existing. Just
> saying that I'm not quite as far down to the minute details as to
> whatever you're interpreting as Mars folks.
>
> I'm not even anti or otherwise naysaying as to other dimensions.
> However, as for the here and now, I need to stick with the regular laws
> of physics, and to keep sharing whatever hard-science becomes
> available, which should include the likes of your observationology as
> to Mars hosting intelligent life, though quite small in stature and
> perhaps a little TBI as well as having been summarily sub-frozen to
> death upon each and every night, not to mention that underground at
> perhaps 10 millibar of mostly CO2 isn't exactly home sweet home to the
> vast majority of life as we know it.
The physics of 'hard science' has taken quite a beating lately.
Quantum Mechanics has all but removed the 'hard' from physics.
Entanglement has ruptured the speed of light with instantaneous changes
made regardless of distance between entangled electrons.
Quantum Dots, or quibits, have erased the 1/0 on/off switch state at
the 'Quantum' level. 'Qubits' operate in both 1/0 on/off states at the
same time, giving quantum computers incredible calculating power.
Quantum Hologram has theoretically proven that all knowledge is
contained in each particle of existence. This is somewhat counter to
regarding atoms as separate entities.
Quantum Vacuum is loaded with energy and generates matter, but does not
itself contain matter. A little like Philosophy saying that the
"absolute enters into but does not participate in change."
I just looked at a 'black hole' and noticed that everything in the
event horizon has a duplicate on the opposite side, a mirror image
almost.
Today 'Hard Physics' is mighty strange, mighty strange indeed!
> >There are so many sick things in the history of mankind that to point
> >at that is to ignore a trillion other equally outrageous atrocities.
> >That's why I said: "The Aliens are just like us. And, that's not
> >good"
> I have absolutely no arguments there. I'd certainly point out that our
> resident warlord(GW Bush) and of his trusty sidekick *** Cheney are a
> couple of incest mutated sick Aliens of the worse possible kind.
> Wouldn't you have to agree?
Sounds like a loaded question. And, "no" I don't agree. The Bush
Administration has again and again proven to be careful, stable, and
well organized.
These are troubled times in which a single major error could spell
disaster. But there is no disaster. Things are running smoothly. I
hope the next administration can do as well.
tomcat
.
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