None. Its a joke, or maybe not in your Quantum Sulkiverse
Hrrmph!
None. Its a joke, or maybe not in your Quantum Sulkiverse
lFully understand your concern, David - after all, some people would find themselves out of a job!
One question though: If the universe really was created by God.... where was he standing?
I will try
If the universe (as we know it) didn't exist and all there was was a giant amount of matter in a very small space moments before the big bang took place there would have been no universe for God to be in to be able to create that big bang, so therefore, what existed before the big bang took place (in the space that our universe now occupies and so on) and how was the source material created (where did the material for the big bang come from?)
I will try
If the universe (as we know it) didn't exist and all there was was a giant amount of matter in a very small space moments before the big bang took place there would have been no universe for God to be in to be able to create that big bang, so therefore, what existed before the big bang took place (in the space that our universe now occupies and so on) and how was the source material created (where did the material for the big bang come from?)
Hrrmph!
How will this change the way we view the universe?
A simple question obviously for the clever people on NSC
Or you could be right or could be wrong.
Schroedinger's Dick head.
Further evidence of the waves http://Breakthrough for Scientists Comes in the Form of Another Gravitational Wave - TrendinTech https://apple.news/AoVUlVKfxTuCvJLL2R4cCNw
It's taken 100 years to start to prove some of Einstein's theories - incredible. Got me thinking about the other thread about voting age, Einstein was 26 when he had his annus mirabilis and published 4 ground breaking papers. For some he wouldn't have had enough experience to vote! He could transform our knowledge of the entire universe, but voting, what would he know!?
Joking aside, these continue to be incredible discoveries.
Further evidence of the waves http://Breakthrough for Scientists Comes in the Form of Another Gravitational Wave - TrendinTech https://apple.news/AoVUlVKfxTuCvJLL2R4cCNw
It's taken 100 years to start to prove some of Einstein's theories - incredible. Got me thinking about the other thread about voting age, Einstein was 26 when he had his annus mirabilis and published 4 ground breaking papers. For some he wouldn't have had enough experience to vote! He could transform our knowledge of the entire universe, but voting, what would he know!?
Joking aside, these continue to be incredible discoveries.
Link doesn't work for me...
I've done a few online courses about this sort of stuff over the last three years, and have now reached the point where the only way I can further expand my knowledge is to learn a LOT more maths; bloody complex maths at that. On the one hand, I want to learn more about the subject, on the other, I'm really not sure that I want, or am even intellectually capable at my age, to learn more maths when I'll only be able to talk about what I've learned with a small number of folk who speak that language.
Might start looking at history of art instead! Or possibly a return to philosophy.
Brilliant that the experimentalists are now really being able to start proving some of the theories though, as you say.
Einstein may have been a genius, but he couldn't get a web link to work !
I only read it quickly, so, how fast is gravity ? How quickly are gravitational forces felt ?
Link doesn't work for me...
I've done a few online courses about this sort of stuff over the last three years, and have now reached the point where the only way I can further expand my knowledge is to learn a LOT more maths; bloody complex maths at that. On the one hand, I want to learn more about the subject, on the other, I'm really not sure that I want, or am even intellectually capable at my age, to learn more maths when I'll only be able to talk about what I've learned with a small number of folk who speak that language.
Might start looking at history of art instead! Or possibly a return to philosophy.
Brilliant that the experimentalists are now really being able to start proving some of the theories though, as you say.
Which online courses if you don't mind me asking? I'm genuinely interested in fitting in stuff like this around work/real life.
I only read it quickly, so, how fast is gravity ? How quickly are gravitational forces felt ?