From: BURT on
On Feb 11, 12:34 pm, bert <herbertglazie...(a)msn.com> wrote:
> On Feb 6, 9:32 am, john <vega...(a)accesscomm.ca> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Feb 6, 7:31 am, "Y.Porat" <y.y.po...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > On Feb 4, 4:06 am, 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?
>
> > > -----------------
> > > you are right!!
> > > and that list you saw
> > > is only  a  very partial list !!
> > > just a few days a go
> > > i found an inner contradiction in QM
> > > Y.Porat
> > > --------------------
>
> > > Y.P
> > > ----------------
>
> > What happens when something gets
> > sucked into a vortex?
> > As it approaches the center, it goes
> > faster and faster around it.
> > But its own dimensions don't change,
> > so it experiences greater acceleration
> > as it gets closer to center.
>
> > For certain sizes of vortices, that acceleration
> > must be great enough to make space
> > turn sideways to get away from it.
>
> > john- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> We have lots of bad theories that take us down a dark alley. Such as
> Photons bounce and change speed. Earth flips its poles. Only one
> universe.Nothing before the BB Just to name a few.   treBert- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

The hypersphere is one instant behind the universes' cosmic origin.

Mitch Raemsch
From: Paul Stowe on
On Feb 11, 11:45 am, Raymond Yohros <b...(a)birdband.net> wrote:
> On Feb 10, 3:17 pm, glird <gl...(a)aol.com> wrote:
>
> > On Feb 6, 1:36 pm, "Dr Ivan D. Reid" wrote:
> > > Do you seriously think we'll ever know *everything*
> > > about the Universe?  
>
> >   I KNOW we will. Quite soon.
> >  And then, as John Wheeler wrote,
> >   "Someday we'll understand the whole thing as one single
> > marvelous vision that will seem so overwhelmingly simple
> > and beautiful that we will say to each other - Oh, how
> > could we have been so stupid for so long?"
>
> > glird
>
> RIGHT ON!

"Oh, how could we have been so stupid for so long?"

Arrogance, pride, stubbornness, and the human tendency to set
paradigms answers this question...

Paul Stowe
From: Raymond Yohros on
On Feb 11, 1:34 pm, Paul Stowe <theaether...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> "Oh, how could we have been so stupid for so long?"
>
> Arrogance, pride, stubbornness, and the human tendency to set
> paradigms answers this question...
>
> Paul Stowe
>

yes but what as John Wheeler meant is that is going
to be something so simple and elegant that it
will be understood by everyone.
we will all look at each other
and say: ahhhh!, of course!
how could it possibly be otherwise!

r.y


From: Raymond Yohros on
On Feb 11, 1:34 pm, Paul Stowe <theaether...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> "Oh, how could we have been so stupid for so long?"
>
> Arrogance, pride, stubbornness, and the human tendency to set
> paradigms answers this question...
>
> Paul Stowe
>

yes but what John Wheeler meant is that is going
to be something so simple and elegant that it
will be understood by everyone.
we will all look at each other
and say: ahhhh!, of course!
how could it possibly be otherwise!

r.y
From: eric gisse on
Paul Stowe wrote:

> On Feb 11, 11:45 am, Raymond Yohros <b...(a)birdband.net> wrote:
>> On Feb 10, 3:17 pm, glird <gl...(a)aol.com> wrote:
>>
>> > On Feb 6, 1:36 pm, "Dr Ivan D. Reid" wrote:
>> > >Do you seriously think we'll ever know *everything*
>> > > about the Universe?
>>
>> > I KNOW we will. Quite soon.
>> > And then, as John Wheeler wrote,
>> > "Someday we'll understand the whole thing as one single
>> > marvelous vision that will seem so overwhelmingly simple
>> > and beautiful that we will say to each other - Oh, how
>> > could we have been so stupid for so long?"
>>
>> > glird
>>
>> RIGHT ON!
>
> "Oh, how could we have been so stupid for so long?"
>
> Arrogance, pride, stubbornness, and the human tendency to set
> paradigms answers this question...

All traits you share in abundance, otherwise you would not have so quickly
fled a discussion in which your ideas were directly opposed by scholarly
research findings.

>
> Paul Stowe