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From: Sid9 on 3 Feb 2010 22:10 "Urion" <blackman_two(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:4ce380aa-c08a-463f-a776-893db054237c(a)n33g2000yqb.googlegroups.com... > Here is a list of unsolved problems in modern physics from wikipedia: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsolved_problems_in_physics > > Why are so many problems? Don't you think there is something seriously > wrong with our understanding of physics and the universe or are we > just overcomplicating things? .. .. Well, get busy. Study physics till you have a doctorate and start researching one of these "problems" By the way, they aren't "problems"...they are things we don't know yet.
From: rabid_fan on 3 Feb 2010 23:15 On Wed, 03 Feb 2010 18:06:19 -0800, Urion wrote: > > Why are so many problems? > The questions will never end. Science is like the mythical Hydra. Solving one problem only begets a slew of others. Such a process has no terminus.
From: BURT on 3 Feb 2010 23:33 On Feb 3, 8:15 pm, rabid_fan <r...(a)righthere.net> wrote: > On Wed, 03 Feb 2010 18:06:19 -0800, Urion wrote: > > > Why are so many problems? > > The questions will never end. Science is like the mythical > Hydra. Solving one problem only begets a slew of others. > Such a process has no terminus. Only one problem has been solved and that is curvature of space but even that is round with the rest of universal geometry. All four dimension curve round. Gravity is a closed curve sphere around the center of mass. This is the 3 dimensional space curve solved. The 4th dimension is round. The secondary model is hypersphere. But we cannot see a dimension beyond a sphere and that is neither in the universe nor outside. A circular orbit cannot fall inward or outward so it takes the pure curv Einstein curve that is round . It has its premotion. Motion curvature geometry is ellipse and one time parabolas. And the ellispes swivel as a standard except for the perfect round flow or motion. Mitch Raemsch
From: BURT on 3 Feb 2010 23:58 On Feb 3, 8:15 pm, rabid_fan <r...(a)righthere.net> wrote: > On Wed, 03 Feb 2010 18:06:19 -0800, Urion wrote: > > > Why are so many problems? > > The questions will never end. Science is like the mythical > Hydra. Solving one problem only begets a slew of others. > Such a process has no terminus. But we havn't found the truth therefore we cannot know the real problem. Mitch Raemsch
From: Chaos out of Order on 4 Feb 2010 00:30
On Feb 3, 6:06 pm, Urion <blackman_...(a)yahoo.com> wrote: > Here is a list of unsolved problems in modern physics from wikipedia: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsolved_problems_in_physics > > Why are so many problems? Don't you think there is something seriously > wrong with our understanding of physics and the universe or are we > just overcomplicating things? Because we can never have a complete understanding of the Universe. There will always be mysteries. Also, some of the unsolved problems are just flaws in the current theories of physics. Sometimes a new, single theory can resolve many mysteries. Lord Kevin, over hundred years ago, believed that physics was almost complete except for "two clouds on the horizon." Those two clouds became Relativity and Quantum Mechanics. |