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String Theory 'blog
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Posted on 08/18/2006 8:55:42 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
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81
posted on
02/04/2007 5:40:08 PM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(I last updated my profile on Saturday, February 3, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
82
posted on
02/19/2007 6:56:21 PM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(I last updated my profile on Thursday, February 19, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: AdmSmith; bvw; callisto; ckilmer; dandelion; FairOpinion; ganeshpuri89; gobucks; KevinDavis; ...
new ping message templates shown in descending order of whimsy:
Perhaps I should reduce the size of the image in that second version?
83
posted on
04/10/2007 9:35:23 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I last updated my profile on Monday, April 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: SunkenCiv
If you want to read a string blog try
http://motls.blogspot.com/ it is “The most important events in our and your superstringy Universe as seen from a conservative physicist’s viewpoint”
84
posted on
04/10/2007 10:08:52 AM PDT
by
AdmSmith
To: AdmSmith
Thanks! Loved this:
Certain people are indeed "framing" their account to fool the least uneducated audiences and they try to make the fate of otherwise extremely technical and specialized scientific questions depend on cheap emotional and irrational clichés, naive philosophical pre-conceptions, fundamentalist oversimplified interpretations of notions such as empiricism, and compassion.
85
posted on
04/10/2007 10:20:12 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I last updated my profile on Monday, April 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: SunkenCiv
86
posted on
04/19/2007 7:34:37 PM PDT
by
Beowulf
To: Beowulf
It’s a big’un, but thanks.
87
posted on
04/19/2007 9:48:41 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(I last updated my profile on Monday, April 18, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: MacDorcha
88
posted on
07/10/2007 11:09:24 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Profile updated Monday, July 9, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: Tired of Taxes
May I be added to your homeschool ping, please?
89
posted on
07/10/2007 12:40:43 PM PDT
by
MacDorcha
(<---NERD!)
To: MacDorcha; DaveLoneRanger; metmom
May I be added to your homeschool ping, please?Hi. DaveLoneRanger runs the Homeschool Ping List. And metmom runs the Another Reason to Homeschool ping list. This is a ping to both of them for your name to be added.
90
posted on
07/11/2007 8:56:16 PM PDT
by
Tired of Taxes
(Dad, I will always think of you.)
To: Tired of Taxes; MacDorcha
I’ll get on that. Sorry it took so long. We’ve had a number of crises to deal with lately and I’ve been strapped for time.
91
posted on
07/12/2007 5:25:03 PM PDT
by
metmom
(Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
To: metmom
Metmom,
My thoughts and prayers are still with you and your family. I hope everyone is well soon.
92
posted on
07/12/2007 9:03:58 PM PDT
by
Tired of Taxes
(Dad, I will always think of you.)
To: AdmSmith; bvw; callisto; ckilmer; dandelion; ganeshpuri89; gobucks; KevinDavis; Las Vegas Dave; ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Feynman
Shortly before his death, Feynman criticized string theory in an interview: “I don’t like that they’re not calculating anything,” he said. “I don’t like that they don’t check their ideas. I don’t like that for anything that disagrees with an experiment, they cook up an explanation — a fix-up to say, ‘Well, it still might be true.’” These words have since been much-quoted by opponents of the string-theoretic direction for particle physics.
[end quote]
more generally, see also:
“Cargo Cult Science”, by Richard Feynman
http://wwwcdf.pd.infn.it/~loreti/science.html
93
posted on
10/22/2007 9:06:59 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Profile updated Tuesday, October 16, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: SunkenCiv
94
posted on
10/22/2007 10:09:20 AM PDT
by
MHGinTN
(If you can read this, you've had life support. Defend life support for others in the womb.)
To: MHGinTN
My pleasure. Freshens the topic as well. Found that nice tidbit while looking for the thing found at the second link.
95
posted on
10/22/2007 10:58:36 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Profile updated Monday, October 22, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: SunkenCiv
Hey, wow, thanks for the links. You gonna give us a pop quiz or what?
To: SunkenCiv
Good resource, SC. Bookmarked. Thanks.
97
posted on
10/22/2007 7:43:34 PM PDT
by
onedoug
To: Eastbound
Excellent idea! Of course, I’ll let everyone know who thought of it... ;’)
98
posted on
10/23/2007 8:55:15 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Profile updated Monday, October 22, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
To: onedoug
99
posted on
10/23/2007 8:55:48 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Profile updated Monday, October 22, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
The World Question Center 2004Zangger's First Law
Most scientific breakthroughs are nothing else than the discovery of the obvious.
Zangger's Second Law
Truly great science is always ahead of its time.
Although there seems to be a slight contradiction in my laws, historical evidence proves them right:
- The Hungarian surgeon Ignaz Semmelweiss in 1847 reduced the death rate in his hospital from twelve to two percent, simply by washing hands between operations -- a concept that today would be advocated by a four year old child. When Semmelweiss urged his colleagues to introduce hygiene to the operating rooms, they had him committed to a mental hospital where he eventually died.
- The German meteorologist Alfred Wegener discovered in 1913 what every ten year old looking at a globe will notice immediately: That the Atlantic coasts of the African and South American continents have matching contours and thus may have been locked together some time ago. The experts needed sixty more years to comprehend the concept.
- When Louis Pasteur stated that bacteria could cause disease, colleagues treated the idea as "an absurd fantasy'!
- The theories of the Austrian psychiatrist Sigmund Freud were called "a case for the police" during a neurologists' congress in Hamburg in 1910.
- Lord Kelvin, President of the Royal Society, only eight years before Orville and Wilbur Wright left the ground in an aeroplane, remarked: "Machines that are heavier than air will never be able to fly!"
- German physicists Erwin Schrödinger's PhD thesis, in which he first introduced his famous equation, was initially rejected.
- When the Spanish nobleman de Satuola discovered the Late Ice Age painted cave at Altamira, established scholars described him as a forger and a cheat.
- The decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs by Jean Francois Champollion in 1822 was still rejected by scholar twenty years after his death.
- And when Johann Karl Fuhlrott discovered the bones of a Neanderthal in a cave near Duesseldorf in 1856, the president of the German Society of Anthropology considered it a bow-legged, Mongolian Cossack with rickets, who had been lucky enough to survive multiple head injuries, but who, during a campaign by Russian forces against France in 1814, had been wounded, and (stark naked) had crawled into a cave, where he died.
- Heinrich Schliemann's excavation of Bronze Age Mycenae and Tiryns in Greece was considered by English archaeologists in The Times' as the remains of some obscure barbarian tribe' from the Byzantine period. In particular, the so-called prehistoric palace in Tiryns was labelled "the most remarkable hallucination of an unscientific enthusiast that has ever appeared in literature."
Scientific breakthroughs will always be held hostage to the lag needed to overcome existing beliefs. Lucius Annaeus Seneca realized this already two thousand years ago, when he said: "The time will come, when our successors will be surprised that we did not know such obvious things."
100
posted on
03/18/2008 11:27:18 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/______________________Profile updated Saturday, March 1, 2008)
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