From: Igor on
On Apr 30, 10:13 am, bert <herbertglazie...(a)msn.com> wrote:
> Tricky stuff first put forward by this guy Reinmann as he discribed
> space not being flat but with curves.

"T'weren't tricky at all. The Earth is a sphere.

>Einstein jumped on that and
> grave us GR.He told us curvature of spacetime embodies the gravity
> force. Hmmm  Now does that space curve exist in Planck
> sizes(Dimentions)?  I think not. How say you ?    treBert

Why would there necessarily be anything special happening to the
curvature at the Planck length, other than the notion that smaller and
smaller pieces of a spherical surface approximate a plane?





From: Raymond Yohros on
On Apr 30, 11:40 am, Igor <thoov...(a)excite.com> wrote:
> On Apr 30, 10:13 am, bert <herbertglazie...(a)msn.com> wrote:
>
> > Tricky stuff first put forward by this guy Reinmann as he discribed
> > space not being flat but with curves.
>
> "T'weren't tricky at all.  The Earth is a sphere.
>
> >Einstein jumped on that and
> > grave us GR.He told us curvature of spacetime embodies the gravity
> > force. Hmmm  Now does that space curve exist in Planck
> > sizes(Dimentions)?  I think not. How say you ?    treBert
>
> Why would there necessarily be anything special happening to the
> curvature at the Planck length, other than the notion that smaller and
> smaller pieces of a spherical surface approximate a plane?
>

exactly.

when you see a cell by itself you do not see
that there can be an entire lifeform behind it.
you have to move the camera farther away from
the source to be able to see that.

that is similar to the curvature of spacetime.

r.y

From: bert on
On Apr 30, 12:40 pm, Igor <thoov...(a)excite.com> wrote:
> On Apr 30, 10:13 am, bert <herbertglazie...(a)msn.com> wrote:
>
> > Tricky stuff first put forward by this guy Reinmann as he discribed
> > space not being flat but with curves.
>
> "T'weren't tricky at all.  The Earth is a sphere.
>
> >Einstein jumped on that and
> > grave us GR.He told us curvature of spacetime embodies the gravity
> > force. Hmmm  Now does that space curve exist in Planck
> > sizes(Dimentions)?  I think not. How say you ?    treBert
>
> Why would there necessarily be anything special happening to the
> curvature at the Planck length, other than the notion that smaller and
> smaller pieces of a spherical surface approximate a plane?

Reason for my question was that GR does not relate in the quantum
realm. Planck length being so ultramicroscopic could make this area
where only "special" thinking can fit. TreBert
From: bert on
On Apr 30, 12:54 pm, Raymond Yohros <b...(a)birdband.net> wrote:
> On Apr 30, 11:40 am, Igor <thoov...(a)excite.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Apr 30, 10:13 am, bert <herbertglazie...(a)msn.com> wrote:
>
> > > Tricky stuff first put forward by this guy Reinmann as he discribed
> > > space not being flat but with curves.
>
> > "T'weren't tricky at all.  The Earth is a sphere.
>
> > >Einstein jumped on that and
> > > grave us GR.He told us curvature of spacetime embodies the gravity
> > > force. Hmmm  Now does that space curve exist in Planck
> > > sizes(Dimentions)?  I think not. How say you ?    treBert
>
> > Why would there necessarily be anything special happening to the
> > curvature at the Planck length, other than the notion that smaller and
> > smaller pieces of a spherical surface approximate a plane?
>
> exactly.
>
> when you see a cell by itself you do not see
> that there can be an entire lifeform behind it.
> you have to move the camera farther away from
> the source to be able to see that.
>
> that is similar to the curvature of spacetime.
>
> r.y- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

Not really TreBert
From: BURT on
On Apr 30, 4:44 pm, bert <herbertglazie...(a)msn.com> wrote:
> On Apr 30, 12:40 pm, Igor <thoov...(a)excite.com> wrote:
>
> > On Apr 30, 10:13 am, bert <herbertglazie...(a)msn.com> wrote:
>
> > > Tricky stuff first put forward by this guy Reinmann as he discribed
> > > space not being flat but with curves.
>
> > "T'weren't tricky at all.  The Earth is a sphere.
>
> > >Einstein jumped on that and
> > > grave us GR.He told us curvature of spacetime embodies the gravity
> > > force. Hmmm  Now does that space curve exist in Planck
> > > sizes(Dimentions)?  I think not. How say you ?    treBert
>
> > Why would there necessarily be anything special happening to the
> > curvature at the Planck length, other than the notion that smaller and
> > smaller pieces of a spherical surface approximate a plane?
>
> Reason for my question was that GR does not relate in the quantum
> realm. Planck length being so ultramicroscopic could make this area
> where only "special" thinking can fit.  TreBert

The fabric of space fits point particles. It is the infinitely small
size that creates Einstein's space-time continuum.

Mitch Raemsch