Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2025 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $70,772
87%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 87%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: math

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Newton’s Laws of Motion Apply To Propaganda; or How Obama Rose To Power

    02/04/2011 9:33:41 AM PST · by Starman417 · 2 replies
    Flopping Aces ^ | 02-04-11 | Skookum
    Newton's First Law Of Motion:An object in motion will remain in a state of motion unless eternal forces are applied. Reflective of Galileo's writings on inertia, this First Law is often called the "Law of Inertia." In propaganda we have a mass known as O or Obama. Without external forces, O tends to wander pointlessly without a point of view, but O has the impetus of an ideology, the ideology of Socialism, but without other external forces O and his Socialism wanders aimlessly in the universe in a type of 'Listless Inertia' peculiar to the intellectually lazy. Thus the...
  • Ripping Apart Einstein

    03/07/2010 2:11:48 PM PST · by LibWhacker · 83 replies · 468+ views
    FQXI ^ | 3/7/10 | Bob Swarup
    Cutting the threads of the spacetime fabric and reinstating the aether could lead to a theory of quantum gravity.If there’s one thing Einstein taught us, it’s that time is relative. But physicist Petr Hořava is challenging this notion and tearing through the fabric of spacetime in his quest for a theory of quantum gravity. His work may also resurrect another entity that Einstein had seemingly buried—the aether. Physicists have spent decades searching for a way to reconcile the seemingly incongruous twin foundations of modern physics: quantum theory, which deals with the infinitesimally small, and Einstein’s theory of gravity, general relativity,...
  • The Non-Expanding Universe

    09/07/2009 9:40:54 AM PDT · by BGHater · 22 replies · 1,226+ views
    FQXi ^ | 25 Aug 2009 | Kate Becker
    Time doesn’t exist. The universe isn’t really expanding. And if you want a theory of quantum gravity, look to the man who inspired Einstein, says Julian Barbour. For someone who believes time doesn’t exist, Julian Barbour sure has a head for dates. He remembers exactly when he started to have doubts about time: It was October 18, 1963, and he was reading the newspaper. He spotted an article about the physicist Paul Dirac and his quest for a theory of quantum gravity—a theory linking Einstein’s ideas about gravity to the clashing doctrine of quantum mechanics. Today, Barbour is on that...
  • Study Plunges Standard Theory Of Cosmology Into Crisis

    07/15/2009 4:00:16 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 18 replies · 537+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 5/5/2009
    As modern cosmologists rely more and more on the ominous “dark matter” to explain otherwise inexplicable observations, much effort has gone into the detection of this mysterious substance in the last two decades, yet no direct proof could be found that it actually exists. Even if it does exist, dark matter would be unable to reconcile all the current discrepancies between actual measurements and predictions based on theoretical models. Hence the number of physicists questioning the existence of dark matter has been increasing for some time now. Competing theories of gravitation have already been developed which are independent of this...
  • The Ten Days of Newton

    12/24/2008 11:56:25 AM PST · by CE2949BB · 38 replies · 1,053+ views
    The New York Times ^ | December 23, 2008 | Olivia Judson
    Some years ago, the evolutionist and atheist Richard Dawkins pointed out to me that Sir Isaac Newton, the founder of modern physics and mathematics, and arguably the greatest scientist of all time, was born on Christmas Day, and that therefore Newton’s Birthday could be an alternative, if somewhat nerdy, excuse for a winter holiday. Think of the merchandise! Newton is said to have discovered the phenomenon of gravity by watching apples fall in an orchard. (His insight came after pondering why they always fall down, rather than upwards or sideways.) Newton’s Birthday cards could feature the great man discovering gravity...
  • Newton’s Third Law and the Death of Wisdom - Secularisms Sin is No Sin

    04/15/2008 6:56:21 PM PDT · by Victory111 · 31 replies · 56+ views
    Cross Action News ^ | 4-15-08 | Michael Bresciani
    It doesn’t take a team of scientist and a ten year study to understand the basics of cause and effect. Whether it’s a sociological explanation or a scriptural tenant the same rule along with its associative principles appear as the immutable law of reciprocation. Some call it karma while others use the more folksy phrase “what goes around, comes around” but by any other name it is still best summarized by the words of the Apostle Paul who said “Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. (Gal 6:7)
  • The first Christian Zionist?

    06/24/2007 9:22:26 AM PDT · by Zionist Conspirator · 5 replies · 289+ views
    Ynetnews.com ^ | 6/22/'07 | Yaakov Lappin
    Secret writings by Isaac Newton reveal his views on the Jewish return to IsraelThe world famous 17th-century scientist Isaac Newton, who discovered gravity and revolutionarized mankind's understanding of physics, may also have been the first Christian Zionist, secret writings have revealed. A new exhibition at the Hebrew University's Jewish National and University Library, Newton's Secrets, which display original writings, drawings, and maps dating back 300 years, reveal startling views held by Newton, which stray far from the scientifically pure image traditionally associated with him. "Tis said that they who sleep in the dust shall rise again some to reward and...
  • A War Between Science and Religon? Ask Isaac Newton(a Scientist Guided by religious fervor)

    06/20/2007 9:05:55 AM PDT · by SirLinksalot · 156 replies · 3,083+ views
    AOL News ^ | 06/19/2007 | Dinesh D' Souza
    A Jerusalem exhibit of Isaac Newton's manuscripts has some newly-discovered papers showing Newton's calculations of the exact date of the Apocalypse. Using the Book of Daniel, Newton argues that the world will end not earlier than 2060. "It may end later," Newton writes, "but I see no reason for its ending sooner. This I mention not to assert when the time of the end shall be, but to put a stop to the rash conjectures of fanciful men who are frequently predicting the time of the end, and by doing so bring the sacred prophecies into discredit as often as...
  • Isaac Newton saw end of world in 2060

    06/17/2007 7:26:12 PM PDT · by voletti · 138 replies · 3,963+ views
    Times of India ^ | 6/18/07 | AP
    JERUSALEM: Renowned British scientist Sir Isaac Newton, the father of modern physics and astronomy, predicted the world would end in 2060. He made the prediction in a 1704 letter that went on show in Jerusalem on Sunday. A famed rationalist, who secured a royal exemption from the ordination in the Church of England that was normally expected of academics of his day so he would not have to follow its teachings, Newton nonetheless based his prediction on a Biblical text. Working from verses in the Book of Daniel, the elaborator of the classical laws of gravity, motion and optics argued...
  • Theory of relativity....Any physicists out there?

    01/16/2005 2:53:56 AM PST · by plenipotentiary · 29 replies · 569+ views
    16 Jan 2005 | Your obedient servant
    Current theory is that nothing CAN travel faster than light (photons), and it is upon this that the theory of relativity rests. How about we change that definition to "nothing travels faster than light", ie that it is not impossible to exceed light speed, it is just that at the moment nothing does. Suppose a particle of light (photon) has some mass (otherwise it would not exist). Suppose we envisage a photon travelling at light speed. We are travelling in our turbocharged faster than light speed vehicle. We come up behind the photon and give it a little nudge. Does...
  • Even Einstein Had His Off Days

    01/01/2005 4:55:42 PM PST · by neverdem · 55 replies · 3,386+ views
    NY Times ^ | January 2, 2005 | SIMON SINGH
    GUEST OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR London WE have now entered what is being celebrated as the Einstein Year, marking the centenary of the physicist's annus mirabilis in 1905, when he published three landmark papers - those that proved the existence of the atom, showed the validity of quantum physics and, of course, introduced the world to his theory of special relativity. Not bad for a beginner. "It's not that I'm so smart," Einstein once said, "It's just that I stay with problems longer." Whatever the reason for his greatness, there is no doubt that this determination allowed him to invent courageous new...
  • On Plato, the Early Church, and Modern Science: An Eclectic Meditation

    11/30/2004 6:21:11 PM PST · by betty boop · 934 replies · 11,089+ views
    November 30, 2004 | Jean F. Drew
    On Plato, the Early Church, and Modern Science: An Eclectic Meditation By Jean F. Drew God, purposing to make the universe most nearly like the every way perfect and fairest of intelligible beings, created one visible living being, containing within itself all living beings of the same natural order. Thus does Plato (d. 347 B.C.) succinctly describe how all that exists is ultimately a single, living organism. At Timaeus20, he goes on to say: “There exists: first, the unchanging form, uncreated and indestructible, admitting no modification and entering no combination … second, that which bears the same name as the...
  • Gravitational anomalies: An invisible hand?

    08/21/2004 1:31:57 AM PDT · by ScuzzyTerminator · 51 replies · 2,561+ views
    Gravitational anomalies An invisible hand?An unexplained effect during solar eclipses casts doubt on General Relativity “ASSUME nothing” is a good motto in science. Even the humble pendulum may spring a surprise on you. In 1954 Maurice Allais, a French economist who would go on to win, in 1988, the Nobel prize in his subject, decided to observe and record the movements of a pendulum over a period of 30 days. Coincidentally, one of his observations took place during a solar eclipse. When the moon passed in front of the sun, the pendulum unexpectedly started moving a bit faster than...
  • Newton Vs. The Clockwork Universe

    07/19/2004 11:35:57 AM PDT · by betty boop · 130 replies · 2,588+ views
    Wolfhart Pannenberg "Toward a Theoelogy of Nature" | July 19, 2004 | Jean F. Drew
    Newton vs. The Clockwork Universe By Jean F. Drew As Wolfhart Pannenberg observes in his Toward a Theology of Nature: Essays on Science and Faith (1993), the present-day intellectual mind-set assumes that there is no relation or connection between the God of the Christian faith and the understanding of the world in the natural sciences. Ironically this separation of God from the world is commonly credited to Sir Isaac Newton, the father of classical mechanics, whose ground-breaking work on the laws of motion and thermodynamics seemed to posit a purely mechanistic, deterministic, “clockwork universe” that was not dependent on God...
  • Where Have You Gone, Isaac Newton?

    10/25/2003 7:47:54 PM PDT · by Hank Kerchief · 149 replies · 432+ views
    Ayn Rand Institute ^ | Oct. 2, 2003 | David Harriman
    Where Have You Gone, Isaac Newton? By David Harriman          More and more today, we are inundated with foolishness masquerading as science. Psychic hotlines proliferate, politicians consult astrologers, and people reject their doctor's advice in favor of "alternative healing" dispensed by quacks. In the past, defenders of real science could be relied upon to expose and debunk such nonsense. So where are these defenders today?         Unfortunately, they are too busy dreaming up foolishness of their own.         This is not, of course, the first time in history that people have believed their fates could be read in the stars and their diseases...
  • Newton set 2060 for end of world

    02/21/2003 5:35:31 PM PST · by MadIvan · 139 replies · 472+ views
    The Daily Telegraph ^ | February 22, 2003 | Jonathan Petre
    Sir Isaac Newton, Britain's greatest scientist, predicted the date of the end of the world - and it is only 57 years away. His theories about Armageddon have been unearthed by academics from little-known handwritten manuscripts in a library in Jerusalem. The thousands of pages show Newton's attempts to decode the Bible, which he believed contained God's secret laws for the universe. Newton, who was also a theologian and alchemist, predicted that the Second Coming of Christ would follow plagues and war and would precede a 1,000-year reign by the saints on earth - of which he would be one....
  • Ditching Dark Matter

    02/15/2003 7:40:45 AM PST · by Phaedrus · 30 replies · 345+ views
    The Guardian ^ | Thursday February 13, 2003 | Marcus Chown
    If Newton saw today's astronomical evidence, would he come up with a different law of gravity? A growing number of people think so, says Marcus Chown There's something wrong with our understanding of spiral galaxies such as our own Milky Way. The stars in their outer parts are being whirled around far too fast. Like children on a speeded-up roundabout, they should be flung into intergalactic space. To explain why this does not happen, astronomers have been forced to propose that the visible stars and nebulae are supplemented by at least 10 times more invisible stuff. The gravity of this...
  • Teachers Will No Longer Need To Pass Basic Reading, Writing And Math Test For Certification In This Blue State

    01/01/2025 9:49:55 AM PST · by george76 · 59 replies
    Daily Caller News Foundation ^ | December 30, 2024 | Jaryn Crouson
    A New Jersey law that removes a requirement for teachers to pass a reading, writing and mathematics test for certification will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2025. The law, Act 1669, was passed by Democratic New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy as part of the state’s 2025 budget in June in an effort to address a shortage of teachers in the state... Individuals seeking an instructional certificate will no longer need to pass a “basic skills” test ... Just months earlier, Murphy signed a similar bill into law that created an alternative pathway for teachers to sidestep the testing requirement....
  • Let's talk about 6/2(1+3)

    12/28/2024 8:35:57 AM PST · by Jonty30 · 69 replies
    December 28, 2024 | Jonty30
    I am getting a lot of people who say the answer is 9, but you can get 9 from 6/2(1+2) if you separate the 2 from the 2(1+2), which seems incorrect to me. I view the 2(1+2) as a complete phrase within the mathematical question, so I think it needs to be solved before you move left to right. 6/2(1+2) = 6/2(3) = 6/6 = 1 But there are a lot of people who want to write the question as 6/2 x (1+2), which is the only way you will get 9.
  • Oops! Newly Discovered Infinities Might Have Broken The Mathematical Universe..."This changes completely the landscape of large cardinals."

    12/20/2024 1:14:13 PM PST · by Red Badger · 77 replies
    IFL Science ^ | December 19, 2024 | Dr. Katie Spalding
    It’s an idea straight out of the schoolyard: that you might one day accidentally count so high that you break the laws of math. A new preprint (that has not yet been peer-reviewed) seems to have done just that, however – and it could have huge ramifications for how we ought to understand infinity. It’s fitting that such a baffling result would have come from set theory: it’s an area with a reputation for being abstract and often counter-intuitive; it has its own esoteric alphabet and language; and it’s famous for results that seem either too basic to have even...