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So, babe, have you had any paradigm shifts, epiphanies, or never-before discovered nuggets of truth from this experimental thread?
 
So, babe, have you had any paradigm shifts, epiphanies, or never-before discovered nuggets of truth from this experimental thread?

actually, yes. And I'm on the verge of producing a new and improved general theory of relativity that doesn't falsely predict time incongruities caused by energy, in either the form of potential or kinetic expressions.
 
Well, I discovered cold fusion.
.
At least I think I saw my solution bubbling a bit. Not sure, though, it could have just been a little left-over carbonation from my Diet Coke.
 
actually, yes. And I'm on the verge of producing a new and improved general theory of relativity that doesn't falsely predict time incongruities caused by energy, in either the form of potential or kinetic expressions.

the old school paradigm tried to make everything work out by letting time slip. You can ride on a photon, in your imagination, and look at the wavelengths of other photons. Another person can ride on another photon and look at you. Supposedly. What you see, or measure, in the other photon depends on you and your photon. But what if a third person is standing still and looking at both of you. . . . . you end up having to theorize that time is changing at different rates in different systems. But the stuff inside the said systems doesn't have any way or knowing who's watching, or where from, and how "time" has to be stretched or compressed to comply with the observer's notions of physical laws.

the conclusion is that whatever the speeds of systems, the speeds of other systems, or the the presence or absence of observers taking measurements. the time is the same everywhere. No such thing as time travel. No path dependency, no way to navigate around the universe and get to some other "time".
 
Well, I discovered cold fusion.
.
At least I think I saw my solution bubbling a bit. Not sure, though, it could have just been a little left-over carbonation from my Diet Coke.

This would indeed be an astute discovery in a Diet Coke. I'd keep it under my hat and buy a lot of Diet Coke before the price goes up exponentially to a hundred dollars a can.
 
actually, yes. And I'm on the verge of producing a new and improved general theory of relativity that doesn't falsely predict time incongruities caused by energy, in either the form of potential or kinetic expressions.

I liked this part.
 
Well, I discovered cold fusion.
.
At least I think I saw my solution bubbling a bit. Not sure, though, it could have just been a little left-over carbonation from my Diet Coke.

I've known, and worked for, some of the fairly well-known scientists who have contributed to proving that cold fusion is a real phenomenon. Quantum Tunneling, man. A deuterium nucleus going under an impossible mountain of energy to join up with another one.
 
Well, I discovered cold fusion.
.
At least I think I saw my solution bubbling a bit. Not sure, though, it could have just been a little left-over carbonation from my Diet Coke.

on the other hand, you pull the tab, and the compressed gases over the Diet Coke slip away, and all the dissolved carbon dioxide just goes to gas. . . . bubbles. takes energy though. . . . heat it up, shake it up, and then pull the tab. Fun. Point it at PKM.
 
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