01-09-2007, 03:20 PM | #211 | ||||||||
Sent to the cornfield
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: L.A. Sprawl
Posts: 589
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
In fact, gravity waves (which have been observed) travel at exactly the speed of light. Gravitons, like tachyons, are also theoretical. We don't even know that such particles/waves exist in the first place. It would make sense for the gravitational force to have a carrier particle as the other three do, but it has not been determined. Forgive me for being skeptical that it would not be widely publicized if the last ~80 years of the study of gravity were overturned... Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
||||||||
01-09-2007, 05:25 PM | #212 | |
Friendly Neighborhood Quantum Hobo
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Outside the M-brane look'n in
Posts: 5,403
|
Couple of things:
Hawking's Radiation requires that particles travel faster than light and thereby backwards in time to escape a blackhole. That's at least one group of particles that one could call Tachyons. Well they only really travel faster than light for the time it takes to clear the event horizon. There's also this theory with a good bit of acceptance about spacetime and torsional forces. See if you start tugging spacetime around in circles, say by way of spinning blackhole, strange things can happen. (Oh and we know at least this much happens.) The theory goes that if spacetime was chugging along at .5c and you came along and traveled in the same direction as it through it at .6c you'd be moving at 1.1c. Well appear to those of us not lucky enough to have our spacetime moving at .5c. They've actually got experiments designed, and being built, to test this. (They use some sort of intense laser light matrix to cause similar spacetime warping and particles moving at high velocity.) Oh and while I'm at it nothing in the universe says you can't travel faster than the speed of light. Einstein just proved you can't accelerate to the speed of light. That's were you're infinite masses and stuff comes in. Hell in fact according to Einstein light shouldn't even travel at the speed of light. In that a photon's mass should increase to infinity through kinetic energy as it accelerates from a stop to the speed of light at the moment of its creation. The fact that it doesn't suggests strongly there is a way around our little speed limit. That and certain exotic materials can make light travel faster than through a vacuum. Quote:
Physics is a wild and wacky world and best left to Physicist lest your brains explode out yer ears. Oh and as for omnipresence, a higher dimensional being could exist in/observe every inch of our dimension and yet be smaller than us. Again its one of those crazy physics thing you can't understand without so much math you'd need to cut down a forest for the paper. |
|
01-09-2007, 05:34 PM | #213 |
Sent to the cornfield
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: The Sayouth
Posts: 5
|
New to this thread, but... wow. Religion turned into a discussion on black holes and quantum mechanics?
<sits back to watch mor knowledgeable people yammer> When this gets back to religion, lemme know! |
01-09-2007, 05:41 PM | #214 |
for all seasons
|
...Everybody say hi to Wandering Wombat.
Now everybody wave goodbye to Wandering Wombat.
__________________
check out my buttspresso
|
01-09-2007, 06:21 PM | #215 | |||||||||||
Everfree
|
Quote:
Perhaps a better example would be a perfect vacuum and an emitter that emits one photon at a specific vector and specific velocity. Until it is desturbed by something, we would know the exact location and velocity, regardless of wave-particle duality. Whether or not such a set up could concievably be constructed does not interest me. Quote:
Pretaining to the actual sentence, you would be right, up until you said they don't exist. Rather, "We don't know if they exist." Admittedly, this may not be the best thread to get into theoretical particle physics, but that has always been something of my main interest. And there are a number of bizarrely named mathematical models and almost-repsected theories that postulate their existance. And forgive me, but, models relied on neutrinos before we could experimentally prove them, becasue they smoothed out mathematical problems. Tachyons do the same thing. Even special relativity has no real problem with tachyons, though it does so alongside certain demonstrations of why a tachyon wouldn't have to violate causality, so admittedly, not the most condusive point -- but, again, we have no reason to believe causality is absolute. So, to sum up: theoretical, but well-backed theoretical. Quote:
Quote:
Just sayin'. Quote:
The problem is, that gravity seems to drop off too quickly compared to the Einsteinian model when relating to very large distances. The theoretical solutions for this are as follows: 1. The General Relativity model is completely perfect, and there is a form of energy that mysteriously repells itself and expands spacetime -- and also that we have never seen and cannot detect, but mysteriously makes up more of the universe than anything else ever. 2. The model is wrong and gravity becomes weaker at larger distances than the General Relativity model predicts. (A possible explaination is the String Theory model of a Graviton, depending on how difficult it is for them to escape the 'brane). This would, of course, invalidate the most accurate, experimentally proven model of gravity, but if we just use Newton's equations, we'll probably end up close enough, anyway. 3. Nothing is causing it. Spacetime merely expands for no explainable reason. Quote:
If I have misinterpereted, please direct me to these observations, because an accurate observation of this area of general relativity that I've not seen would be fantastic. Quote:
Quote:
Although, strictly speaking, from the looks of things Quantum Mechanics will be the one doing the lasting. Oh, and on this note... Quote:
Quote:
The point was, creating a universe is not some bizarrely ineffable physics of some alternate universe. At the risk of being repetative... Quote:
The 'barely pretaining to the topic' exclaimer is right there. (Though I suppose technically, it relates to arguments being made in the thread, which would be the 'barely' part). Hell, though, I mean, I think about 35% of this post is composed of jokes. I'm just glad to be a part of a religious discussion who takes everything under-seriously and cannot get on the religion topic. As a stark contrast to a bunch of other people. It's performance art! Edit: Some stuff removed because it barely made sense. I'll get back to it when I can word it... 'non-sucky'.
__________________
FAILURE IS
LEARNING TO ACCEPT THOSE THINGS I CANNOT CHANGE Last edited by The Kneumatic Pnight; 01-09-2007 at 06:47 PM. |
|||||||||||
01-09-2007, 06:33 PM | #216 |
-~= 'Biter' =~-
|
Thank you, Thank you...
I'd like to thank God, without which none of this would be possible.
Oh, and praise be to the White Unicorn. Now, perhaps I can start a sub-topic. I have heard, seen, been made aware of a group of 'Christians' who claim a hatred toward the Jews. (You know the type, the kind who 'liked Passion of the Christ' because it 'made Jews look all mean and stuff'). Perhaps someone from that camp could explain that to me, as it's one of those things I can't get my head to understand. I mean, I've read alot from the Source, and could not see where people get that line of thought from. There, I got to ask a question! Let's watch the answers as they unfold, shall we? -Edited because I missed my Closing Parentheses- Last edited by Loki, The Fallen; 01-09-2007 at 07:43 PM. |
01-09-2007, 07:18 PM | #217 | |
helloooo!
|
Quote:
Also, this thread is already going way too fast. I spent the entire school day (Everyone at our school has a laptop) reading what had been written while I was asleep. It really doesn't need any more than that. I think this thread should take a step aside from arguing about the logical failings of religon, and perhaps everyone should state their own personal religious experiences, their religon, and why they belong to it. Despite the fact that this forum doesn't seem to be too diverse (Everyone seems to be either Christian, or agnostic/atheistic), this would probably serve as better conversation than arguing over books thousands of years old. Personally, I was born and baptised catholic. My family wasn't very religious, (We only went to church about twice a year, and even then my father didn't come, because he's Anglican). I never really liked church, the one we attended was always pretty boring, and I didn't know all that much background information, so I didn't understand much. I always considered myself catholic however, until late in 8th grade. I really thought about what I believed, I read the old testament of the bible, started the new testament (although I didn't finish it.) I decided that I didn't believe in a God. Since then I've always thought of myself somewhere between atheism and agnosticism. If there is a god, or divine force (Which is an idea I like much more than the image of a human-like being sitting up there in the clouds) I think it either simply created the universe, or life on earth, or, providing there is a specific god, I really like the Bahai just because it seems really cool to me, that, and the fact that they had a huge-ass temple a few miles away from my old house in Chicago. Anyway, I'd really like to hear what religons different people are, and why. Edit: I also believe that if there is a god, he wants us to be good people, and that he has the wisdom to look past what religon we were brought up in or joined. I don't mean to be inflammatory, but the Christian idea that God cares about people accepting Jesus, not their good deeds, just seems like the people writing went "Hey, I know how we can get more donations..."
__________________
noooo! why are you doing that?! Last edited by 42PETUNIAS; 01-09-2007 at 07:35 PM. |
|
01-09-2007, 08:07 PM | #218 | ||
-~= 'Biter' =~-
|
42PETUNIAS' first comment:
Quote:
And if you think today was bad, you should have come back after 24 hours from Sunday Night, I had around 10 pages to sift through. On Topic, also from 42PETUNIAS: Quote:
I will disagree about the whole "Hey, I know how we can get more donations" part, as there is no requirement in that religion to give money. Of course, some denominations may differ. But I can see how one can look at it, as simply a group of men finding a way to market a product by changing the flavor. I don't believe it myself. |
||
01-09-2007, 08:14 PM | #219 |
Worth every yenny
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: not my mind that's for sure!
Posts: 1,299
|
Just throwing something in here. It makes absolutely no sense than an omnipotent being would need something like hell as a "deterrent" from sin. The entire point of a deterrent is to stop people from doing things you don't want them to do, which an omnipotent being, especially one that made the very people in question, would never have to resort to if it really didn't want people to do those things. The only way hell pans out is as some sort of sadistic experiment, then. Give beings urges and punish them if they don't resist. It's kind of like putting mice in rooms full of baited mousetraps.
|
01-09-2007, 08:28 PM | #220 | ||
helloooo!
|
Quote:
Quote:
__________________
noooo! why are you doing that?! |
||
|
|