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| Tags: absolutely, correct, general, relativity, special, theories |
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#1
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" After a time of doubt, now I can conclude that
Special and General Relativity theories are absolutely correct. They are wonderful theories. It is very interesting to see that the more you study them, the more convinced you are they are wonderfully correct. I consider myself a very fortunate person. Now, I have a good job for teaching Relativity, a lot of friends, good relationships. Etc, etc. The life is wonderful under SR and GR. Gee guys, do not dare to attack SR and GR, now that I'm convinced they are true. Study them, and you will see how real they are. You'll love them. PS. I'd also studied a lot the life of Micky Mouse." :-) |
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#2
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Dear Albertito:
On Mar 6, 10:47*am, Albertito wrote: snip a poke in imagined ribs Science is not about faith, or belief, or even really acceptance. It is about testing the limits of theory, to see what Nature does based on how she has behaved in other circumstances. The only "faith" we have is that She will behave the same way during a well-controlled experiment, no matter where perfomed, with less specific equipment, or by whom. No theory is "correct", they only serve to make predictions as to how Nature will behave. Hope you did better with your study of Micky Mouse. David A. Smith |
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#3
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On Mar 6, 8:47 am, Albertito wrote:
[snip spew] Now that you are reduced to posting **** like this, will you finally realize you need to stop posting here? |
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#4
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On 6 mar, 17:58, dlzc wrote:
Dear Albertito: On Mar 6, 10:47 am, Albertito wrote: snip a poke in imagined ribs Science is not about faith, or belief, or even really acceptance. It is about testing the limits of theory, to see what Nature does based on how she has behaved in other circumstances. The only "faith" we have is that She will behave the same way during a well-controlled experiment, no matter where perfomed, with less specific equipment, or by whom. No theory is "correct", they only serve to make predictions as to how Nature will behave. Hope you did better with your study of Micky Mouse. David A. Smith Dear David A. Smith: Who was speaking of science? But, if you like, we can. Can you provide a pretty extensive list of all predictions SR and GR can do? Through that list, we could analyse which predictions have been experimentally tested, and which ones are under suspicion of being fictitious, unphysical. I bet black holes and gravitational waves are unphysical phenomena. Or you would argue gambling is not allowed in science? :-) |
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#5
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On 6 mar, 18:12, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Mar 6, 8:47 am, Albertito wrote: [snip spew] Now that you are reduced to posting **** like this, will you finally realize you need to stop posting here? Where is your humor, fella? With hemorrhoids and aging faster than your twin? |
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#6
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Dear Albertito:
On Mar 6, 11:21*am, Albertito wrote: On 6 mar, 17:58, dlzc wrote: On Mar 6, 10:47 am, Albertito wrote: snip a poke in imagined ribs Science is not about faith, or belief, or even really acceptance. *It is about testing the limits of theory, to see what Nature does based on how she has behaved in other circumstances. *The only "faith" we have is that She will behave the same way during a well- controlled experiment, no matter where perfomed, with less specific equipment, or by whom. No theory is "correct", they only serve to make predictions as to how Nature will behave. Hope you did better with your study of Micky Mouse. Who was speaking of science? "Special anbd General Relativity theories." You were. In Religion, you do not get to test the limits of Sin... in Science you seek to find where your theories break down. But, if you like, we can. Can you provide a pretty extensive list of all predictions SR and GR can do? Available on the web. Pick you you feel the most strongly about. Through that list, we could analyse which predictions have been experimentally tested, and which ones are under suspicion of being fictitious, unphysical. Problem is, it is the only theory (since GR is a superset of both Special Relativity and Newton) that provides a single base to describe *all* observations in its realm. You can stretch Newton in some sense to cover the precession of the perihelion of Mercury, but not the bending of starlight as much as is measured. I bet black holes and gravitational waves are unphysical phenomena. You'd lose the former. I think you'd win on the latter. Or you would argue gambling is not allowed in science? :-) Well, probability is a part of Science... David A. Smith |
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#7
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On 6 mar, 18:58, dlzc wrote:
Dear Albertito: On Mar 6, 11:21 am, Albertito wrote: On 6 mar, 17:58, dlzc wrote: On Mar 6, 10:47 am, Albertito wrote: snip a poke in imagined ribs Science is not about faith, or belief, or even really acceptance. It is about testing the limits of theory, to see what Nature does based on how she has behaved in other circumstances. The only "faith" we have is that She will behave the same way during a well- controlled experiment, no matter where perfomed, with less specific equipment, or by whom. No theory is "correct", they only serve to make predictions as to how Nature will behave. Hope you did better with your study of Micky Mouse. Who was speaking of science? "Special anbd General Relativity theories." You were. In Religion, you do not get to test the limits of Sin... in Science you seek to find where your theories break down. But, if you like, we can. Can you provide a pretty extensive list of all predictions SR and GR can do? Available on the web. Pick you you feel the most strongly about. Through that list, we could analyse which predictions have been experimentally tested, and which ones are under suspicion of being fictitious, unphysical. Problem is, it is the only theory (since GR is a superset of both Special Relativity and Newton) that provides a single base to describe *all* observations in its realm. You can stretch Newton in some sense to cover the precession of the perihelion of Mercury, but not the bending of starlight as much as is measured. I bet black holes and gravitational waves are unphysical phenomena. You'd lose the former. I think you'd win on the latter. Or you would argue gambling is not allowed in science? :-) Well, probability is a part of Science... David A. Smith Ok, I'd win on the latter. Correct. Uhmm, but I have understood that the existence of black holes is inexorable linked to the existence of gravitational waves! It is required that black holes could emit gravitational waves. That means I would win on the former, too :-) If gravitational waves are unphysical, then black holes must be unphysical, too. |
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#8
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On Mar 6, 12:47*pm, Albertito wrote:
" After a time of doubt, now I can conclude that * Special and General Relativity theories are * absolutely correct. They are wonderful theories. * It is very interesting to see that the more you * study them, the more convinced you are they * are wonderfully correct. I consider myself a very * fortunate person. Now, I have a good job for * teaching Relativity, a lot of friends, good relationships. * Etc, etc. The life is wonderful under SR and GR. * Gee guys, do not dare to attack SR and GR, now that * I'm convinced they are true. Study them, and you will * see how real they are. You'll love them. * PS. I'd also studied a lot the life of Micky Mouse." * :-) Are you kidding? From most of your posts, I think we can conclude that you must have studied them for about five minutes apiece. |
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#9
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Dear Albertito:
On Mar 6, 12:10*pm, Albertito wrote: On 6 mar, 18:58, dlzc wrote: On Mar 6, 11:21 am, Albertito wrote: ... I bet black holes and gravitational waves are unphysical phenomena. You'd lose the former. *I think you'd win on the latter. Ok, I'd win on the latter. Correct. No, *I* think you'd win on the latter. I don't have a problem an infinite "speed of gravity". Uhmm, but I have understood that the existence of black holes is inexorable linked to the existence of gravitational waves! No. Newton describes black holes also. The only difference is the mass required. It is required that black holes could emit gravitational waves. That means I would win on the former, too :-) Nope. "Could emit" =/= "must emit". If gravitational waves are unphysical, then black holes must be unphysical, too. Gravitational waves may or may not be "physical". If they propagate at infinite speed, they cannot be detected by LIGO... one particular instrument, one particular model. Pulsars do seem to be losing angular momentum, and GR provides a mechanism to transfer that momentum (allowing for conservation of momentum). Seriously, your misunderstandings alone are no challenge to Relativity. And I suspect you don't care. David A. Smith |
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#10
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"Albertito" wrote in message ... " After a time of doubt, now I can conclude that Special and General Relativity theories are absolutely correct. PS. I'd also studied a lot the life of Micky Mouse." Rather too much it seems. -- Martin Hogbin |
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