Ankh-Morpork Guard
First Post
...but that's still judging the entire universe soley on the way Earth works...


Ankh-Morpork Guard said:...but that's still judging the entire universe soley on the way Earth works...
Ankh-Morpork Guard said:...but I thought laws couldn't be violated![]()
Its an interesting idea, really. We set so much into these laws and what we say IS right, yet we really don't have anything beyond theory when it comes to the universe as a whole. Kind of seems to me that claiming these are unbreakable laws of physics would be like having lived away from rivers and natural water sources one's entire life and claiming that, due to this, the entire world is covered in land.
Umbran said:Lots of people are on the kick of having a problem with "judging the entire universe based on what happens on Earth", these days (EN World and elsewhere, ime). As if it were a bad thing. Never mind the fact that assuming such until proven otherwise works. Never mind that there's no particular reason to assume otherwise.
WayneLigon said:here was a nice anecdote I saw recently about Einstien (and hopefully he really said it). He remarked that this years test in his class would use the same questions as last year. "But Dr. Einstien," his assistant remarked. "These students have talked to those from the previous year, of course; won't they know many of the answers already?" "Ah," said Einstien. "The questions are all the same but this year the answers are all different."
Ankh-Morpork Guard said:as much reason to assume they ARE correct(as they've been proven to be here on Earth and in our solar system) as there is that they AREN'T(i.e. the universe is a big place and has a habit of constantly surprising us).
I've got nothing against science, at all. Its just when people start saying things that aren't possible when we really have such a limited scope on what IS and ISN'T possible that gets me. Again, the universe is a big place.![]()
Galilean relativity was pretty well known by the mid-20th century.Thunderfoot said:Many scientists said that machine guns would never work on jet powered planes because the bullets move slower than the plane. However, an as then unknown law of motion proved that theory wrong.
Thunderfoot said:Part of the problem(s) which have to be overcome if one is to actually arrive at a conclusion is
a) Is the theory of relativity closer to a law or is it mutable
b) In the approaching zero equation are we talking about zero or absloutely zero
c) If the theory of relativity does not apply, what is the formulae by which we equate faster than light travel.
d) One could argue that increase of speed does not increase mass, an SR-71 flying at Mach 4 actually weighs less than one flying at Mach 2 - is that due to the breaking of the gravity barrier or to some unknown law of physics and motion?
e) If we could travel at that speed, name three practicle applications beyond sending probes to other galaxies, solar systems.
E=Mc2 Energy equals matter times the speed of light squared - Direction is not part of that equation.
But then - what do I know?![]()
Ankh-Morpork Guard said:I Its fine to assume that these laws really are laws...but what if they aren't?
There's as much reason to assume they ARE correct(as they've been proven to be here on Earth and in our solar system) as there is that they AREN'T(i.e. the universe is a big place and has a habit of constantly surprising us).
I've got nothing against science, at all. Its just when people start saying things that aren't possible when we really have such a limited scope on what IS and ISN'T possible that gets me. Again, the universe is a big place.
fuindordm said:As it turns out, 70% of the energy content of the universe has a negative energy density--the famous cosmological constant that is making the universe expand every more rapidly.