| Re: The importance of a theory Dear dleviwing,
I have no quarrel with you good sir knight. It was Silly Sally who said I was a genius, not I. And every time you ban a fellow, all the people want that one to come back.
Neutralino is an honorable skeptic. He is not being closed minded. Remember, a skeptic must also be skeptical of skeptics themselves. That is the route which I call mutual apprehension, and it is just one of many you will find on this here quest.
If you do so wish to try and make fun of another, perhaps you would like to stand up and tell everybody what will happen when two points in the universe, separated by a mere planck distance, begin expanding away from eachother at faster than TSOL. Perhaps you will come to the conclusion that positive infinity and negative infinity must touch eachother from opposite sides of the looking glass, as our mathematics system suggests were we to define that which only our minds has decided is undefined. Perhaps you would like to tell us this in the new thread which Robert has started for this months topic. So far we are missing you there.
Be well, and always hold everything to be defined under the light, and indivisible in your sight. And always remember that indivisible means the same thing as divided by nothing.
And for the future there is much hope and we are all forward looking, so someone like yourself could do some actual experiments. Arm-waving and armchair physics is one route I have found. But it is one route of many, and of the other routes there is just experimentation. You being a skeptic, why don't you try and replicate some of the experiments I have shown to everyone. All the information is free and for the quick dissemination to all, so take up your glue and your razor blade and find out for yourself what has been, or can be done.
You know that is the importance of a theory. To do experimentation afterwards.
sincerely,
POK |