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Last edited by Ken G; 13-February-2008 at 10:49 AM. |
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It is true that GR predicts something funky should happen when stellar densities exceed neutron stars, and sure enough we see something funky happening there. It also predicts light should be bent by gravity, and sure enough we see that. So it has great predictive potential-- now why do people take that and extrapolate it to absurd extremes like macroscopic time travel? That's the real question. That's the same fallacy as taking Newton's laws and inferring that reality is deterministic, or taking the Big Bang model and inferring that the universe was once a single point. How many times do we need to learn this lesson about what our own science really is? A conceptual guide for how to provide a context that makes our questions meaningful, but the hands of the practitioner are always all over the result. But you don't want to know this, it's too challenging, so you decide that it is angry ranting without any evidence to support that view. Quote:
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Thank you Neverfly. I will admit to making my case forcefully, and in the impersonal venue of an electronic forum that can come off as attacking, but my purpose is to challenge people to look critically at their assumptions, and that must be a bit inflammatory to be successful. It's nothing personal, the inflammatory rhetoric is just to stir things up a bit-- the argument stands entirely on the merits of logic and evidence.
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I've seen how people successfully challenge others to think. First they acknowledge the person's curiosity. They say things like, "Yes, I can see where you're coming from. But have you considered X?" They direct them to useful books or websites. They ask guiding questions. They try to explain in terms that the naive but curious person might understand. Suppose one of my students came up to me and said, "I am trying to come up with a scenario where someone can travel to Alpha Centauri and back in a day. Now I've heard that you can't go faster than light, but surely it's just a speed like any other? I mean, can't you just accelerate up to the speed of light, and then add a bit more thrust?" My approach would be something like, "Okay. Do you know why the speed of light is special? No? Right, you'll need to know a bit about relativity. There's a very good book in the library which will introduce you to the idea, but here's a few thoughts to get you started..." And so on. Maybe concluding with, "So unless you can come up with some really radical new physics, I'm afraid you're stuck with a minimum of a nine year round trip." At the end of this the student might have learned something, might even have become fascinated by the actual science. What I would not do is say, "Faster than light? That's science fiction rubbish! You might as well talk about learning to levitate or turn lead to gold. How are you going to overcome the infinite mass? You can't! End of story. Hey, are you feeling challenged now?" |
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Then there is this quote by you: Quote:
Both of which are saying the are some new physics to prevent either from happening. (you really should find copy of Eddington's speach at the January 1935 meeting to realize how similar your objections sound) It also appears to me that you are just cherry picking which equations of GR you are willing to accept. You kept demanding experimetal evidence for CTCs and when I asked for direct evidence for Gravity Waves, you gave me indirect evidence (the spindown). This seems a bit inconsistent on your part, especially after this comment by you earlier in this thread: We have a hint for Gravity Waves, based on the equations, but we still don't have direct experimental evidence.
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Some try to tell me, thoughts they cannot defend,... - Moody Blues. |
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For example, let's look at the Chandra situation. He made a prediction that certain stars would do certain things. That's science. He might have been right, and he might have been wrong, but he was not imagining magical technologies, he was simply making a testable prediction. When CTCs are framed in that kind of language, they are science. When framed as precursors to time machines, they are make believe, just as much as an ESP machine based on electromagnetic "auras" or an astral projection machine based on quantum mechanical tunneling. I just find it curious how some of these make believe technologies acquire an air of authenticity, while others are derided as pandering to the lunatic fringe. Quote:
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I'll let you know as soon as you start. So far all you've been doing is asserting your position.
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It may not be your goal, but it's certainly your result.
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"If this were play'd upon a stage now, I could condemn it as an improbable fiction." Shakespeare, Twelfth Night Illuminati's Razor-The most complicatedly evil answer is usually the most correct answer. - Fazor "Every book is a children's book if the kid can read." - Mitch Hedberg "Distance doesn’t matter much in space, where if you just start a thing off with the right kind of shove, sooner or later it will get where you want it to go." -Frederik Pohl, Mining the Oort |
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Maybe because in multiple worlds time travel, time travel means leaving your family and friends behind,They will never see you again forever. Not a fun prospect for the loud shirt, khaki shorts, camera brigade. And in single universe, they are here, they just can't say anything. As well, maybe our era is lost to history, our feats taking on an Atlantian gleam of fools gold. We are but myths of legands, at best. We may simply have been forgotten. We are arrogant if we think we are so important, that people would travel through TIME just to visit us. Besides, the 21'st centaury is DANGEROUS, they still KILLED people back then. And the food, oh mercifal marty, is made out of MEAT, taken from ANIMALS, they KILL the animals to get the MEAT. It's DISGUSTING. And the SMELLS, ugh.. they burned oil FROM UNDERGROUND, to make their cars go. It is all just so, SO GROSS!
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"The Internet is really, really great..." Avenue Q "And a disintegrator beam. People listen when you have a disintegrator beam."
mike alexander |
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"If this were play'd upon a stage now, I could condemn it as an improbable fiction." Shakespeare, Twelfth Night Illuminati's Razor-The most complicatedly evil answer is usually the most correct answer. - Fazor "Every book is a children's book if the kid can read." - Mitch Hedberg "Distance doesn’t matter much in space, where if you just start a thing off with the right kind of shove, sooner or later it will get where you want it to go." -Frederik Pohl, Mining the Oort |
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