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Subject: Re: Sophistry 103 (was: I know that!) -- From: Hardy Hulley
Subject: Re: When will the U.S. finally go metric? -- From: Volker Hetzer
Subject: Re: The anchored string revisited, but now in 3D ? -- From: ale2@psu.edu (ale2)
Subject: Re: A photon - what is it really ? -- From: "Robert. Fung"
Subject: Re: faster than light travel -- From: f95toli@dd.chalmers.se (Tobias LIndström)
Subject: Re: BOYCOTT AUSTRALIA -- From: dave lawson <71202.1577@compuserve.com>
Subject: Re: The anchored string revisited, but now in 3D ? -- From: ale2@psu.edu (ale2)
Subject: Re: Universal Coordinate System -- From: Darrin Edwards
Subject: Re: Teaching Science Myth -- From: D.I.Roussel@shef.ac.uk (David Roussel)
Subject: Re: How certian is the Uncertainty Principle? -- From: lkh@mail.cei.net (Lee Kent Hempfling)
Subject: MacRae & Myers: THE CHOICE IS YOUR'S! -- From: edconrad@prolog.net (Ed Conrad)
Subject: MacRae & Myers: THE CHOICE IS YOUR'S! -- From: edconrad@prolog.net (Ed Conrad)
Subject: Re: BOYCOTT AUSTRALIA -- From: pain
Subject: Phospher Coating of CRTs -- From: dan@camelot.mssm.edu (Dan Samber)
Subject: off-topic-notice spncm1996319122108: 1 off-topic article in discussion newsgroup @@sci.physics -- From:
Subject: Re: Creation VS Evolution & -- From: Judson McClendon
Subject: Re: Sophistry 103 (was: I know that!) -- From: patrick@gryphon.psych.ox.ac.uk (Patrick Juola)
Subject: Re: The history of Gibberish -- From: nanken@tiac.net (Ken MacIver)
Subject: Re: Announce: Neutron Bomb--Its Unknown History and Moral Purpose -- From: tm@pacificnet.net (tom moran)
Subject: Re: Autodynamics -- From: glong@hpopv2.cern.ch (Gordon Long)
Subject: Re: Teaching Science Myth -- From: jmfbah@aol.com
Subject: Re: faster than light travel -- From: Jim Batka
Subject: Re: faster than light travel -- From: Jim Batka
Subject: Re: Satellite--Geosynchrous Orbit Question -- From: Richard Mentock
Subject: Re: Where's the theory? (was: Specialized terminology) -- From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Subject: Re: What is a constant? (was: Sophistry 103) -- From: Anton Hutticher
Subject: Re: Time & space, still (was: Hermeneutics ...) -- From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Subject: Re: Pope votes for Evolution (was Re: Creation VS Evolution) -- From: Jim Batka
Subject: Re: Time & space, still (was: Hermeneutics ...) -- From: CharlieS
Subject: Re: Cryonics bafflegab? (was re: organic structures of consciousness) -- From: lbsys@aol.com
Subject: Re: q: the splitting of energy levels of amonia -- From: breed@HARLIE.ee.cornell.edu (Bryan W. Reed)
Subject: Re: supersonic combustion ramjets (scramjets) -- From: rmc@silver.sni.ca (Russell Crook)
Subject: Re: What is a constant? (was: Sophistry 103) -- From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Subject: Re: Hermeneutics and the difficulty to count to three... -- From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Subject: RE: Spellbound -- From: mellyrn@enh.nist.gov
Subject: Re: Sophistry 103 (was: I know that!) -- From: weinecks@mail2.sas.upenn.edu (Silke-Maria Weineck)
Subject: Re: Cryonics bafflegab? (was re: organic structures of consciousness) -- From: wowk@cc.umanitoba.ca (Brian Wowk)
Subject: Re: Creation VS Evolution -- From: ssimpson@cnwl.igs.net (IG (Slim) Simpson)

Articles

Subject: Re: Sophistry 103 (was: I know that!)
From: Hardy Hulley
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 15:03:44 +0200
Silke:
> You misunderstood; do you have an _original_ cite for that?
In other words, I should have been sensitive to your *intentions*, and
not to your words. More decon hypocrisy, perhaps?
Silke:
> You're not an academic, huh? Let me fill you in on the customs of the
> tribe: a) says "text soandso is blablabla." b) asks: "what part of the
> text do you base that judgment on?" a) answers, "well, here on page xx,
> the author says, etc.etc."
I'll leave theories concerning my vocation (and all other facile
speculation) in your very capable care. The rest of your paragraph
attests only to your deficient comprehension. Firstly, I made no claim
of the form "text soandso is blablabla". I made a claim about
deconstructionism as a philosophical movement (a potent oxymoron) - as
such, I am free to corroborate my statement by appealing to any informed
authority on philosophical movements in general. Secondly, you did not
ask: "What part of the text do you base that judgement on"? Your
question was: "Do you have a cite for that"? I supplied such. The word
"text" hadn't entered into the exchange, until your ill-considered
reply, above.
The subject of discussion was the foundations of a particular movement,
not the content of any particular "text", as you imply. Your attempt to
subvert it is dishonest. You may well plead stupidity instead, however -
your voluntary association with Derrida could plausibly be evaluated in
this light.
Silke:
>>> What's your opinion based on?
Hardy:
>> Rational and systematic reflection. In other words, concepts alien to 
>> you.
Silke:
> Are you imitating Zeleny, Kagalenko, or Beavis?
I'm sure all of the above will be pleased to hear that you consider them
models of "rational and systematic reflection".
> This is a very simple matter: you assume to be in a position to pass
> judgment on a text you either haven't read or haven't understood.
On which text have I passed judgement, now? If the mysterious text to
which you refer is unintelligible, then I may quite justly judge it so -
without understanding it (in fact, not understanding it is a
prerequisite for this)... but, then again, you haven't been specific
about what my alleged judgment was, either.
> That thing is often frowned upon wherever people engage with 
> philosophy.
Then there is no apparent reason why *you* should be frowning.
Before I leave you to be a pretentious adherent of French
pseudo-intellectuals on sombody else's time, why don't you ruminate upon
the following (in your customary bovine manner). Of the authors I
quoted, Grayling and Scruton, in particular, are well respected figures.
Grayling has published work on Wittgenstein (the closest that authentic
philosophy ever gets to Derrida) to his credit, while Scruton is an
acknowledged authority on Kant (as far as this is possible). Now, either
their descriptions of deconstructionism are basically correct, or else
accomplished thinkers are incapable of grasping it. The latter would
certainly lend some weight to my evaluation of the meaningfulness of
Derrida's contributions.
Cheers,
Hardy
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Subject: Re: When will the U.S. finally go metric?
From: Volker Hetzer
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 14:33:25 +0100
> Dick Brewster wrote:
> >
> > Marc-Etienne Vargenau wrote:
> > >
> >
> > > One of the problems with the US adopting the SI is that they do not understand it
> > > and often break the rules. I visited the Petrified Forest National Park this summer.
> > > The signs giving the distances inside the park were given in both SI and obsolete
> > > units, and the SI units were even given first. Good. Unfortunately, the sign read :
> > > "16 KM, 10 MI" (instead of "16 km").
> >
> > Good God!  What a terrible event.  Let me apologize for my entire country.  I
> > sincerely hope you weren't caused any permanent emotional damage from that
> > experience.
Well, there are worse things. The first thing I saw when going to
england was a sign on
the road indicating some distance as 2m . Now, beeing used to SI
Units...
After some seconds I figured that they meant miles and the sign made
sense to me.
But the truly bad things are all the self invented abbreviations like
cms, gms or kph which
mean something totally different when interpreted properly.
Tolerating these mistakes usually gives the impression that SI is
basically
like the old system, which is untrue.
In order to get its full merit (especially for rapidly linking different
units
together in calculations) you just HAVE to use them correctly. Otherwise
it just means
driving an air conditioned car but ignoring the air conditioning and
using a stove instead.
Volker
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Subject: Re: The anchored string revisited, but now in 3D ?
From: ale2@psu.edu (ale2)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 13:49:52 GMT
In article <56hrmr$1jj6@r02n01.cac.psu.edu>
ale2@psu.edu (ale2) writes:
> > 
> > Consider an infinite 3 dimensional system of masses and springs such
> > that each mass has six springs attached to it in a symmetric fashion,
> > and all the masses are hooked together by the springs and form a cubic
> > array. This is the system one considers as a simple model of vibrations
> > in solids?
> > 
> > Now transform the above system:
> > 
> > 1) replace each spring with an inductor and capacitor in series,
> > 
> > 2) each mass is replaced with one end of a capacitor and the other end
> > of the capacitor is grounded.
> > 
For more fun make both the inductor and capacitor in 1) above, variable
and variable independently of all others (let it change with time?).
Changing the capacitance in a region has the effect of changing the
"potential" (but with a twist?) and changing the inductance in a region
has the effect of changing the effective mass (but with a twist?).
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Subject: Re: A photon - what is it really ?
From: "Robert. Fung"
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 08:54:06 -0500
Peter Diehr wrote:
> 
> You cannot derive Planck's constant from Maxwell's equations. The original derivation
> was "by extraction from experimental data", followed by a theoretical procedure that
> showed how black body radiation is distributed. Nobody understood 
> what this all meant,
> including Planck (1900).  Einstein found a use for Planck's 
> relation, E = h*frequency,
> in his 1905 paper on the photoelectric effect.
> 
> But the photoelectric effect cannot be derived from classical electromagnetism; it is
> new physics.  h appears only when quantum physics is present.
>
> Robert Fung wrote: 
> >
> > I've only read something to this effect by Dirac something like:
> > theta * E - E * theta = ih for a component of the superposition.
> >
> 
> This is a commutator relationship; it is pure quantum mechanics.
> 
> > >
> > > If you are able to fully specifiy the electromagnetic field, then one of
> > > the quantum properties is that you no longer know how many photons you have!
> > > That is, the photon number is not an eigenvalue of the electromagnetic field.
> >
> >         I guess this is the case when the source is switched on and off and
> >         the resulting wave packet contains energy larger than one hbar*w_o
> >         yielding many coherent, phase-related photons ?
> >
> 
> No, as far as I know, you can never be sure that you have only one photon.
            It's implied that this is the case in this recent work:
            http://p23.lanl.gov/Quantum/kwiat/ifm-folder/ifmtext.htm
> Take a course (or two) in quantum mechanics to find out how
> this all works.  It's a nice way to while away the time!
           Perhaps this is a more pedagogical description of the 
           applicability of photons ? :
           The Nyquist limit:
                 delta w * delta t >= 1/2
           leads to a sampling limit of twice the frequency of the 
           highest frequency component of a signal.
           The corresponding HUP eq is:
                 delta E * delta t >= h
           since  E=hw. 
           But what does this mean ? E=hw is a continuous function
           of E for w. It only applies when matter e.g. the Bohr      
           model of electron shells etc. is involved ?
           That is, in something called free-space, the E=hw
           is useless ? 
           Is this the "tree falling in the forest" paradigm ?
           A magnet surrounded by iron filings exhibits magnetic
           field quantization nicely I think. When the field passes
           through uniform spread of filings the filings move into
           Faraday lines. Why ?  The filings bunch 
           together into the Faraday lines. They quantize in this 
           way because the magnetic field prefers to go through
           the filings rather than free space. This leaves a 
           magnetic depletion zone between the lines where filings 
           were, while additional filings placed in these zones
           will move into the existing lines.
           The question is, whether the magnetic field is quantized
           in such a way in "free-space" rather than a continuously
           varying field strength ? 
           Is the magnetic field continuous if we don't look at it ?
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Subject: Re: faster than light travel
From: f95toli@dd.chalmers.se (Tobias LIndström)
Date: Thu, 14 Nov 1996 22:00:47 GMT
 When you move with certain speed compared to a pre-defined time-frame
(for example the earth)  you will experience time-dillations, that is,
your time will run "faster" than the time in the time-frame (the
earth). This is the idea behind the famous "Twin-paradox", this effect
will occur at ANY speed but you can't detect it unless you are
traveling at a very high speeds (remember that we are talking about
velocity COMPARED  to something else)
Time-dillation will also occur in gravity-fields and that is the
reason why clocks at diffrent altitudes will run at diffrent speeds
(the clock at the highest altitude will run slower).
Now to the second part. You can't  reach velocitys higher than c (that
is the whole  point behind the theory of relativity) so there is no
way you can travel backwards in time just by going fast enough, BUT it
may be possible to go back in time using timedistortions caused by
extremely strong gravity fields, this is the idea that for example
Kurt Godel used when he "designed" a time machine and it is also the
principle behind the famous(?) "Tippling cylinder", however none of
these designs can be used to build a real time machine (The
Tippling-design uses infinte long cylinders and Godels design uses
other mathematical tricks) .
Both the time-dillation effect at diffrent altitudes and the effect at
diffrent speeds have been tested many times and the reslut matches
those predicted by the theory of relativity (your High school teatcher
was right exept for the fact that they didn't use a 747, they used the
a Concorde...)
I hope this somewhat confusing explanation can be of some use.
Tobias Lindström 
physics student at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
(sorry about the lousy english...) 
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Subject: Re: BOYCOTT AUSTRALIA
From: dave lawson <71202.1577@compuserve.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 08:58:34 -0800
pain wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>  Boycotting Australia proves that you are Asian ? If I want to
> prove that I am european, who am I supposed to boycott ?
> 
> >NATIVES OF AUSTRALIA.....STOP BUYING FROM WHITE
> >SHOPS......PROTEST......THIS IS A HITLER IN WOMAN'S DISGUISE....
> >PAULINE HANSON IS A WHITE SUPREMACIST
> 
>  There is even a better way. You should stop using EVERY SINGLE
> THING INVENTED BY THE WHITES... That will prove you are a true
> ass...ian.
> 
> Cheers
> 
> Mario "the froggie"
If you are an American, you boycott Cuba and prosecute anyone else that
doesn't.
Dave
from Canada, eh.
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Subject: Re: The anchored string revisited, but now in 3D ?
From: ale2@psu.edu (ale2)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 13:37:31 GMT
In article <56c3ou$sng@r02n01.cac.psu.edu>
ale2@psu.edu (ale2) writes:
> If i plug Iain Mains book twenty more times he said he might get me a
> free copy (not).
(Make that nineteen more times)
> 
> In Iain Main's book "Vibration and Waves in Physics" he considers the
> physics of the anchored string. Now what gives me goosebumps about this
> system is that it has the same frequency wavelength relationship as a
> massive quanta in one dimension!
You also forgot to mention what about the above also gives you
goosebumps. The example which Iain Main uses is of a string under
tension, anchored at two points, and with a bunch of springs attached
to the string which give it an additional sideways restoring force. All
the springs in his example all lie in a single plane (that plane also
contains the string). Now for the goosebumps. If the string lies in say
the z axis, the string will have two fundamentally different modes of
vibration:
1) the string moves in the plane containing the springs ("massive"
modes),
2) the string moves in the plane perpendicular to the plane containing
the springs ("massless" modes)!
3) almost forgot the longitudinal modes of vibration (also "massless")
> 
> (children and mental midgets are easily impressed)
> 
> A while back i asked the readers of sci.physics to come up with a
> physical system which has the same frequency wavelength relationship as
> a massive quanta in 3 dimensions. Well either no one cared about my
> question or they did not see it (i've been kilefiled?) ?
> 
> I think i have something now that works ?
Yes, i think the below might work, but your three-dimensional system of
inductors and capacitors no longer has massless modes like Iain Mains
example with the anchored string. Please try a little harder!
> 
> Consider an infinite 3 dimensional system of masses and springs such
> that each mass has six springs attached to it in a symmetric fashion,
> and all the masses are hooked together by the springs and form a cubic
> array. This is the system one considers as a simple model of vibrations
> in solids?
> 
> Now transform the above system:
> 
> 1) replace each spring with an inductor and capacitor in series,
> 
> 2) each mass is replaced with one end of a capacitor and the other end
> of the capacitor is grounded.
> 
> Now perturb the system at some small region (apply an oscillating
> voltage at a point where one of the masses once was) for a long time
> with less than some critical frequency and energy is not absorbed after
> steady state is reached, but increase the frequency above the critical
> value and energy propagates out of the small region?
> 
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Universal Coordinate System
From: Darrin Edwards
Date: Thu, 14 Nov 1996 20:32:55 GMT
odessey2@ix.netcom.com(Allen Meisner) writes:
>     You can determine whether any of the buoys is at absolute rest by
> shining a laser in all directions. If any of the beams is deflected,
> you know you are in motion. If you adjust your velocity so that none of
> the laser beams is deflected, you will then be at absolute rest. I
Well, you will be at rest relative to that buoy; in other words, at
relative rest.  Let me put it this way: I adjust my velocity as you say,
keeping my eye on buoy 1 and its laser emitters, until none of buoy 1's
beams are deflected.  I then notify Starfleet Command that I am at
Absolute Rest.  Meanwhile, you adjust your velocity in exactly the same
manner, but the buoy you are looking at is buoy 2 (which, as we said before,
appears to be traveling at +10 velocity units in the frame determined by
buoy 1).  When none of buoy 2's beams appear deflected, you in turn
notify Starfleet Command that you are at absolute rest.
SC now has a problem.  We both _claim_ to be at absolute rest, but we
also both agree that the _other_ fellow is moving, from our points of view.
(Uggh, baddish grammar, my apologies:  _I_ claim that you are moving from
my point of view; _you_ claim that I am moving from your point of view.)
And it should be clear that SC also agrees that we are moving at different
speeds, which doesn't seem consistent with a claim that _each_ of us is at
absolute rest.  (I am avoiding the issue of whether SC thinks the difference
in our sppeds is just 10 velocity units, as in Galilean transformations,
or some other number, determined by Lorentz or some other transformations.
The point is we don't appear to be moving at the same speed.)
So... The question is...
1) Are we both wrong in claiming to be at absolute rest?
or
2) Is one of us right in claiming to be at absolute rest, while the other
   is wrong?
2) seems indefensible to me.  (Imagine the whole thing being videotaped;
buoy 1 is on the left, say, and buoy 2 is on the right, as we watch the
tape back home.  As a precaution against the videocamera blowing up or
whatever, a second tape was made, but from the other side - in this tape
buoy 2 is on the left, and buoy 1 is on the right.  That was the idea anyway,
but Oops! Someone forgot to paint the 1 and 2 on the buoys!  Can we tell
by looking at the videotapes which is which?  (The ships, lasers, etc, are
identical, and the tape is low-budget so that you can't make out the
stars too well, only the ships, lasers, & buoys.)
1) means that either we need a third buoy & ship to define absolute rest
(in which case you can wipe me & buoy 1 out of the picture, and you are
left with an identical situation with two dudes & two buoys), or else
absolute rest cannot be defined via this operational procedure.
> think that light's speed is always the same. However, since, in my
> opinion, it is possible to determine absolute velocity, light's speed
> relative to moving objects varies. If you are moving at .5c and emit
> light in the direction you are traveling, the velocity of the light is
> still c, but relative to the ship it is .5c. Similarly, if you are
> moving toward a light source at .5c, the source emits light at c, but
> relative to you the speed is 1.5c. The light is not moving toward you
> at 1.5c, but you must take into account that you are moving toward the
> light source at .5c. You would therefore be able to determine that you
> are closing at 1.5c. This is because it is possible to determine one's
> absolute velocity. If you couldn't, then you would have to use Special
> Relativity.
> 
> Regards,
> Edward Meisner
I'm not sure about the rest of this...
Cheers,
Darrin
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Subject: Re: Teaching Science Myth
From: D.I.Roussel@shef.ac.uk (David Roussel)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 14:01:29 GMT
In article <328BAA68.4B82@mhv.net>, lepore@mhv.net says...
>
>Why can't it simply be that ice has a very low coefficient of
>friction?  Why is anything special presumed to happen beneath 
>the ice skate blades?
A coefficient of friction is macro generalisation.  A measure 
of other phenomena going at a micro scale.  There is some other 
cause with the coeff being the effect.
Dave Roussel
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Subject: Re: How certian is the Uncertainty Principle?
From: lkh@mail.cei.net (Lee Kent Hempfling)
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 14:01:41 GMT
ale2@psu.edu (ale2) enunciated:
>Has the following experiment been performed ?
>I think i have read somewhere that experiments can now be performed
>such that the uncertainty of conjugate pairs of variables approach the
>limits set by the Uncertainty Principle?
>Say one can do such an experiment where the measured uncertainty in
>pairs of conjugate variables is extremely close to the theoretical
>limit set by the Uncertainty Principle, if there was some small
>uncertainty in the Uncertainty Principle might one have a small chance
>of measuring a violation of the Uncertainty Principle?
>I'm uncertain, %^(...      Thanks for any thoughts?
Anytime parts of a whole are observed the whole can not be observed.
Anytime a whole is observed the parts are not, of it would no longer
be a whole. Take it micro and the perspective of observation is even
more pronounced. Observe a two wave system, one where a positive wave
and an anti-positive wave reside. One can not observe both at the same
time. And one can not extrapolate the potential of neutrality when the
two are separated by negative. It would have taken the negative to
cause neutrality. So,.... without going into the momentum and position
argument. No. 
lkh
Lee Kent Hempfling...................|lkh@cei.net
chairman, ceo........................|http://www.aston.ac.uk/~batong/Neutronics/
Neutronics Technologies Corporation..|West Midlands, UK; Arkansas, USA.
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Subject: MacRae & Myers: THE CHOICE IS YOUR'S!
From: edconrad@prolog.net (Ed Conrad)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 14:22:55 GMT
Out of courtesy to possible newcomers -- in the dark about the
controversy which has been raging since last March -- a bit
of information follows:
The dynamite was ignited by Ted Holden when, as part
of HIS home page, he posted:
>  http://access.digex.com/~medved/conrad/conmain.htm
which is entitled:
>                       PETRIFIED HUMAN/HOMIND
>                      AND OTHER LARGE ANIMAL
>                 BONE IN CARBONIFEROUS STRATA
This page was prepared totally by Ted, but it permitted
me to have my own say in the matter at
>  http://www.access.digex.net/~medved/conrad/contest1.htm
which is entitled:
>                          MAN AS OLD AS COAL
Just recently, Ted added two color photos I had sent him, of what I
claim is a petrified human skull embedded in -- and protruding from --
a boulder which had been extracted from between anthracite veins
near Shenandoah, Pa., during a surface-mining operation.
The boulder is mentioned deep into Ted's home page and can be called
up for viewing by turning to:
>    http://www.access.digex.net/~medved/conrad/skulla.jpg
A second photo offers a comparison with the contour of a human
skull and can be seen at:
>   http://www.access.digex.net/~medved/conrad/skullb.jpg
I should like to note that both Andrew MacRae of the Univerity of
Calgary and Paul Myers of Temple University have home pages of their
own concerning some of this subject matter.
Their material can easily be found by using Netscape.
Since I have never prepared a home page --- and, quite frankly, don't
know how to do so -- I was never in a position to include references
to the home pages of either Andrew MacRae or Paul Myers on the pages
that, loosely translated, are mine.
The bottom line in the controversy so far -- at least I think so -- is
the insistence by Andrew MacRae and Paul Myers that their microscopic
evaluation of the cell structure of a few of my specimens they had
examined does not reveal the presence of Haversian systems.
I have kept telling them that they can look 'til they're blue in the
face because they'll never see the structures surrounding the
Haversian canals as is clearly evident in non-petrified bone.
They don't seem to get the message that, quite simply, the process
of petrification has caused the surrounding structure to disappear,
leaving only the Haversian canals as the proof that the rock-like
objects are bone.
A comparison of photos of the cell structure of non-petrified bone and
the cell structure of one of my specimens can be seen at:
>      http://www.access.digex.net/~medved/conrad/c2.jpg
Additionally, a comparison of the interior surface features of
non-petrified bone and one of my specimens -- taken with a scanning
electron microscope (SEM) -- can be viewed at:
>     http://www.access.digex.net/~medved/conrad/bones.jpg
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Subject: MacRae & Myers: THE CHOICE IS YOUR'S!
From: edconrad@prolog.net (Ed Conrad)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 14:22:27 GMT
> For Andrew MacRae and Paul Myers:
Let's get down to brass tacks.
Both of you have been incredibly cynical about my claim of having
discovered petrified bone of large land animals -- including man --
between anthracite veins in Carboniferous strata where
established science insists it certainly doesn't belong.
Both of you, because of your special interests (and buoyed with the
challenge of shutting me up to score some valuable points  with your
colleagues), have been especially critical about these findings.
At this point in time, you have had numerous opportunities to see the
skull-like object embedded in the boulder which I insist is, beyond
all doubt, The World's Most Important Fossil, a human skull dating
back to the coal formations.
Do you still adamantly insist that the object embedded in the boulder
is nothing more than a concretion, a rock?
Do you still vehemently deny that it bears no resemblance -- none
whatsoever -- to a human skull?
To make it easy on yourself, I have written two answers (listed
below).
All you need do is pick one, then post it on talk.origins. Nothing
could be easier!
>                              (Answer No. 1)
Attention Asshole:
Your boulder and the different colored stuff in the center is a
concretion and bears NO resemblance -- none whatsoever _
to a human skull.
You're a lunatic, a bloomin' idiot and a dipshit.
As one of the posters stated, someday the ``men in the white coats"
will knock on your door and cart you away. It'll be what you deserve.
You've got nothing, pal. No petrified bones! No petrified soft organs!
No nothing! You're a  phony!  And your ``discoveries" are phonier than
you are.
I think I've made myself perfectly clear.
                                ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>                                     Answer No. 2
Ed, I've examined the photos of the boulder rather carefully and have
come to the conclusion that, whatever is embedded in the center, it
certainly does bear a distinct resemble to the contour of a human
skull.
Of course, ``looking like" and ``being" are horses of different fire
departments. A confirmation -- either way -- will require considerable
testing.
In fact,  maybe an answer will still be inconclusive until the boulder
is broken apart to examine what is really inside.
Meanwhile, I realize I've given you a very hard time and  have to
admit, rather sheepishly, that my opinion of the cell structure of the
specimens I had examined microscopically was a bit off base.
After all, I frankly admit I've never examined petrified bone before,
therefore really don't know if you're correct in claiming that the
surrounding structure of the Haversian systems vanishes as a result
of the petrification process.
As for your collection of specimens found in the coal fields, I hope
you realize that I've been dismissing them as concretions -- nothing
more than naturally shaped rocks -- because this has been the party
line for the longest time (and most often in the past it has proven to
be correct).
But never before, to my mind, has anyone ever come up with such a wide
assortment of specimens that seem to bear a resemblance to bone and
even soft organs.
I will admit, if you had found only a half-dozen or so, I definitely
wouldn't make such a statement. But you claim that you've discovered
80,000 and, although I first chuckled about your arithmetic, I now
realize it's no tall tale.
What amazes me even further is that, as you've mentioned on the
internet, every one of the specimens is different (although a few are
somewhat siimiliar contour but of different sizes).
I'd say you have what you claim you have because you certainly 
have been producing intriguing specimens, one after another after
another.
In retrospect, I apologize for being so sarcastic and reving up my
colleagues by debunking your noble cause which, if I can believe you,
is neither fame nor fortune but to give mankind a basic truth about
our species.
Documentation that man is indeed as old as coal -- that our roots
extend far beyond that of the earliest inhuman primates of 65 million
years ago --  would be welcome news to all of humanity, especially in
these dismal times when, because we think we're nothing special, we
seem to have lost all respect for ourselves and our fellow man.
YES, it is my humble opinion that the object embedded in the boulder
does INDEED resemble a human skull.
I truly hope you will understand why I've done what I had to do and
will let bygones be bygones.
Meanwhile, I'd like you to know I would welcome the opportunity to
become an active participant in your further research.
.
You've said you bear no animosity against folks like me who have given
you such a hard time. If I can believe you -- and I do -- maybe we can
work together to help give mankind a wonderful gift of knowledge about
itself as we prepare to set foot into the 21st century.
Return to Top
Subject: Re: BOYCOTT AUSTRALIA
From: pain
Date: 15 Nov 1996 12:53:26 GMT
slarsson@bccancer.bc.ca (Stephan Larsson) wrote:
>pain  wrote:
>
>
>>>AND ALL THAT HAVE SUFFERED AND BEEN ABUSED BY WHITES.......
>
>> And if I have been abused, let's say, by the Japanese, who 
>>should I boycott ? Is there a directory of boycottable countries
>>for those that have a particular grievance ?
>
>Surely, nobody has ever been abused by the Japanese?
 Say that to the Koreans, for instance!
 During WWII, a number of countries were occupied by Japan. The
policies of racial supremacy the Japanese pursued there are
horrendous.
 Do you really believe that racism is a "White" invention ?
Cheers
Mario "the froggie"
Return to Top
Subject: Phospher Coating of CRTs
From: dan@camelot.mssm.edu (Dan Samber)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 14:25:53 GMT
Does anyone know the temporal properties of the typical phospher
used to coat monitors?
Thanks
Dan
Return to Top
Subject: off-topic-notice spncm1996319122108: 1 off-topic article in discussion newsgroup @@sci.physics
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Return to Top
Subject: Re: Creation VS Evolution &
From: Judson McClendon
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 08:38:29 -0600
D.J. wrote:
> Just curious. Do you know where to find a legitimate shortened version
> of the Ten Commandments (Thy shall not steal..etc.) on the Internet?
> Ive searched everywhere from Moses to Mount Sanai but all I get are
> ridiculous versions modified for the benifit of some company or
> individual.  Any Ideas?  Also I agree.  I do believe we were somehow
> genetically manufactured or something like that.
> 
> derek@mail.balista.com
The Ten Commandments 
 1  You shall have no other gods before Me. 
 2  You shall not make for yourself any carved idols. 
 3  You shall not take the name of the LORD your God in vain. 
 4  Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. 
 5  Honor your father and your mother, that you may have long life. 
 6  You shall not murder. 
 7  You shall not commit adultery. 
 8  You shall not steal. 
 9  You shall not lie. 
10  You shall not covet. 
Exodus 20:3-17 
-- 
Judson McClendon
Sun Valley Systems    judsonmc@ix.netcom.com
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Sophistry 103 (was: I know that!)
From: patrick@gryphon.psych.ox.ac.uk (Patrick Juola)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 14:24:26 GMT
In article <328BDD87.6A4F@nwu.edu> brian artese  writes:
>>>Just because a speaker has doubts about how a listener will receive his
>>>statements does not mean he does not say what he planned to say.
>> 
>> No, but it does imply that he has doubt about the message received, and
>> thus an implicit recognition that the same text/words can convey 
>> multiple
>> messages (substitute the word "meaning" if you prefer) -- and thus
>> that there is a functional and logical difference between the words
>> and the intended message.
>
>The reason you're confused is that sometimes you use the word 'message' to 
>refer to an actual articulation, and other times you use it to mean 
>something that 'gave birth' to an actual articulation -- and you jump from 
>one to the other without being aware of it.
Well, no.  I'm very clear and precise in this distinction, having just
submitted a paper to a major linguistics journal on almost exactly
this topic as it relates to various typological and analytic aspects
of linguistics.
Let me be perfectly clear.
The "message" is a message in a Shannon-theoretic sense; it is the
information received (and presumably acted upon).  It is, presumably,
largely language and dialect independent and to a large degree speaker
independent as well.  It is realized only in the mind of the framer and to
a lesser and potentially-distorted extent in the mind of the hearer(s).
The "articulation" (or the words uttered) are the encoding of the message
for a particular communications channel; it is language, dialect, speaker
(and hearer) dependent, and exists in a physical sense as well -- for
example, words on a page or disturbances in the air that can be picked
up by a tape recorder.
Note that the "message" also exists in a sense that is scientifically
testable; it's not simply a concept that exists only in some unfalsifiable
Platonic Empyrean.  Shannon's experiments with noisy channel capacity,
Hamming's theorems on error-correction, and (more recently) my own work
on linguistic complexity are all evidence that the ``message'' exists
in a scientific-but-possibly non-physical sense.  (This, for example,
the same sense in which an encryption function can be said to exist.
That's actually a pretty good metaphor and you should hang on to it.)
Anyway, that's all approximately what I said here :
>> The message is what is received in the mind of the hearer.  The words
>> uttered are, well, the words uttered.
See?  No terminological confusion.
>
>Now, we both agree that, barring any aural mistakes, when I say 'Dave 
>Thomas is a Bastard,' what you as a listener first 'receive in your mind' 
>are the words 'Dave Thomas is a Bastard.'  In other words, you know 
>perfectly well *what* I said -- that is, you heard the message.
No.  I heard the *articulation*.  I have to interpret it to realize
the *message*.
>Properly 
>speaking, this *articulation* is what constitutes the reality of a 
>message.
Flatly and utterly wrong.  Again, see Shannon or Hamming.
>So when you say that you might 'hear the wrong message,' what you mean is 
>that the message may conjure a set of associations for you that are 
>completely alien to the associations that *my* thoughts had attached to 
>the message.
Well, no.  I mean that you interpret the articulation to yield the wrong
message.  But you're at least in the right ballpark.
>Notice that in the explanation above -- and in the real world -- there are 
>_only_ articulations that may or may not give rise to other articulations 
>via metonymy.  What you're calling the 'intended meaning' of an 
>articulation exists only as a finite set of words and/or phrases that 
>makes the articulation appropriate in a given context.
Where did "finite" or "appropriate" slip in?  The "intended meaning" is
the information I intended to convey; the information may or may not
have been conveyed successfully (as both speech and text are not
error-free channels -- and as you [correctly] point out, context is a
significant part of the articulation->message mapping.)
It's also not necessary that either a message or an articulation (broadly
defined) exist as a linguistic entity -- I can convey a message quite
well by, for example, crooking my finger at someone to indicate "come
here" or throwing a dish at someone to indicate displeasure.
[snip]
>>> In other words, "the author cannot say what he means to say." Isn't it
>>> ironic that this is exactly the claim that people think deconstruction 
>>> makes?
>> 
>> Right.  Isn't it ironic that from this (self-evident) claim,
>> deconstructionists seem to jump to the conclusion that the text is
>> primary over the inferred intent, and that any interpretation that can
>> be screwed out of the text is valid -- and equally valid with any other
>> interpretation, regardless of (e.g.) consistency with the author's
>> avowed meaning or other writings?
>
>By the way, do you not see how your use of the term 'avowal' proves my 
>point?  As you yourself suggest, the 'final say' about 'what an author 
>means' is located in what he avowes -- i.e. what he explicitly 
>articulates.  Here -- and in all cases -- 'meaning' or 'intent' is to be 
>found only in such an articulation, not in some mysterious 'source' that 
>is not itself an articulation.
Here again, you're focusing on the text instead of the intended meaning,
(I conjecture) as a result of a self-imposed blindness to the possibility
that there is a message underlying the articulation of the words.  I
don't see the words "final say" which you think you're quoting -- and as
a matter of fact, I specifically allow for (at least) *two* ways by which
an (inferred) message can be disproven, one from the author's disavowal
and another from consistency with other writings.
E.g. :
 (i) Sam went to the bank.
(ii) Suzy went to the bank, too;
(iii) she wanted to see how high the water level was to see if she could go
swimming.
Is it reasonable to infer from these three articulations, in this proximity,
that the same meaning for the word "bank" (as the edge of a river) is
intended?  (Empirically, it certainly is.)  In this case, if you infer
from articulation (i) that I [the author] intended to convey a message
compatible with "Sam went to a financial institution," you've got more
than enough evidence to disabuse yourself of that inference *without* an
explicit disavowal.  (Here I refer you to the work of Yarowsky, Church,
and Gale on "one sense per discourse.")
In the case of an explicit statement about the author's meaning (e.g. "No, no,
you idiot, that's not what I meant at all!"), that articulation itself
should convey a message -- probably a message compatible with
the idea that the author thinks that (what she sees as) the message you
interpreted from her prior articulation is not the message that she
intended.  And so a skilled listener/reader will attempt to reconcile
the message he believed that he (originally) received with the new
information that the author thinks he received.  (More formally, of
course, "interpreted from the articulation he received".)  The easiest
way to do this reconciliation, of course, is to abandon the prior
message and reinterpret the original articulation.
To briefly recap : People don't sense messages, they sense articulations
and infer messages from them.  The underlying messages exist in a
testable scientific sense -- and communication between people is
primarily a process of message exchange having primacy over articulation
exchange.  The speaker has a message she intends to convey, which may or
may not map identically onto the message the hearer infers from the
communications channel.  To assume that there is no such thing as the
"intended message" and that the set of articulations is all that exists
can be naively, theoretically, and/or empirically falsified.
	Patrick
Return to Top
Subject: Re: The history of Gibberish
From: nanken@tiac.net (Ken MacIver)
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 17:47:55 GMT
tejas@infi.net (Ted Samsel) wrote:
>I was under the impression that Gibberish came about after the isolation
>of gibberelic acid, a plant mutagen.
To achieve such a result, you must, of course, first double, then
square it and plant the result in a pool of gibberelic underneath a
shifting, springing footnote.
ken
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Announce: Neutron Bomb--Its Unknown History and Moral Purpose
From: tm@pacificnet.net (tom moran)
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 15:04:07 GMT
>           New Book Available--Download for Free
>   Provocative, Educational, Entertaining, Enlightening
>
>             THE FATHER OF THE NEUTRON BOMB,
>           THE MOST MORAL WEAPON EVER INVENTED:
>     The Life and Times of the Neutron Bomb Inventor,
>                       Sam Cohen
>
>Sam Cohen is retired after a forty year career in nuclear 
>weapon issues. 
	During the Gulf War build up, there appeared some 45 vcolumns in
the N.Y. and L.A. Times calling for the U.S. to bash Israel's enemy
Iraq.
	Of the 45 columns, 42 of them were by Jews.
	One of them was Sam Cohen.
	He called for using the neutron bomb. 
	"Use Neutron Bomb on Iraq?"
	The answer was yes.
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Autodynamics
From: glong@hpopv2.cern.ch (Gordon Long)
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 14:21:21 GMT
 wrote:
>> glong@hpopv2.cern.ch (Gordon Long) writes:
>> [stuff deleted]
>Yes, I was reminded of this by Jim Carr.  The resonance points out that
>secondary elastic effects are happening caused by charge, spin and strong
>forces  a one unique energy.  No  relation to the neutrino theory, as
>FAIK.
  They're really inelastic effects, and in a sense they are actually 
part of the neutrino theory (aka Standard Model).
>> This is, of course, complete nonsense.  First, it has nothing to do 
>>with Robert Hatcher's claim that if you have more neutrinos, you will 
>>get more neutrino interactions.  Second, it's not true anyway.  If the 
>>neutrino is massless, it can still have any energy it wants (just like 
>>photons, which can range from radio waves to gamma rays), and can 
>>change energy though scattering. 
>
>Gordon, we know why the photon travels at *c* on account of Maxwell's 
>equations.  What is the mechanism for the neutrino to travel at *c*?
>
>It is the wave nature of light that allows increasing (or decreasing)  the
>photon energy by  scattering.  The photon is subjected  to a scattering
>*decrease* in energy as it climbs out of the sun's interior.  The neutrino
>theory would have us believe that the neutrino does not scatter on it's
>way out of the sun!!!!   The  neutrino theory apparently does not allow a
>neutrino wave nature.  Without a wave nature,  the neutrino cannot acquire
>(or lose) energy in the same fashion as the photon.  
  Oh my.  I hadn't quite realized the extent of misunderstanding.  Well, 
let me try to clarify a few points:
 1. Massless neutrinos travel at *c* because they're massless.  
This is true for any massless particle, not just neutrinos and 
photons.
 2. The process that gives rise to a photon losing energy (as it 
passes through the sun, for example) can also lead to an increase 
in the photon's energy.  This process is known as scattering.  
 3. Neutrinos can scatter in the same manner (or almost the same 
manner) as photons.  They just don't scatter quite so often.
 4. Neutrinos do have a wave nature, whether or not they have 
mass.  By the same token, they also have a particle nature, again 
regardless of whether they have mass.  The same is true of photons.
  Of course, none of this is tremendously relevant to the fact that, as 
you increase the flux of the incident neutrino beam, you will observe 
more neutrino scattering events.
>> On the other hand, if the neutrino 
>>is massive, adding energy does not increase its mass, it just increases 
>>its energy.
>
>Yes, sorry. Should have said (mass energy) increase.  With a small mass
>adding energy to the neutrino should give the neutrino  an enormous
>DeBroglie wavelength and allow it to scatter quite handily.
>
  Adding energy (or momentum) to a neutrino decreases its DeBroglie
wavelength; it does not increase it (lambda = h/p).  Think about it --
if it were otherwise, adding energy would increase the cross section even
in the absence of a resonance, which you yourself pointed out was not the
case.  But the main reason for the small neutrino cross section is that
neutrinos can only interact weakly (i.e. via the weak force), and not
strongly or electromagnetically.
  I hope this cleared up at least a few points.
    - Gordon
--
#include 
Gordon Long                      |  email: Gordon.Long@cern.ch
CERN/PPE                         |    
CH-1211 Geneva 23 (Switzerland)  |
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Teaching Science Myth
From: jmfbah@aol.com
Date: 15 Nov 1996 15:12:43 GMT
 lrmead@ocean.st.usm.edu (Lawrence R. Mead) wrote:


Return to Top
Subject: Re: faster than light travel
From: Jim Batka
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 10:08:43 -0500
First of all, I've *heavily* editted the followup for this (I'm sure
that many of the newsgroups originally in the header couldn't care
less about this topic).
Doug "thE_bUG" Tham wrote:
> lbsys@aol.com wrote:

> > Ah, there was a 60 million year old sneaker
> > footprint being found at the end of the story in a layer of slate()....
> Interesting story...sorry about intruding here, but there are tons of
> REAL fossil anomalies, e.g. imprint of what looks like a sandaled
> footprint crushing a trilobite; toads, frogs, spark plugs, nails and
> even a pterosaur found trapped in unbroken coal...looks like the guy who
> made that time machine was pretty careless, huh?? :)
Good grief!  Don't let the creationist "nu-nus" hear this or it'll
drive this newsgroups s/n -> 0 (if you are a creationist & not a
"nu-nu" then that remark was not direct @ you).
If anyone is aware of information regarding these "geologic anomalies"
on the net, could you please post information on how to review it?
Thanks,
-- 
Jim Batka	Email:  jim.batka@sdrc.com
Contrary to popular opinion, the word "gullible" is not in
(American) Dictionaries.
Return to Top
Subject: Re: faster than light travel
From: Jim Batka
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 09:52:22 -0500
David L Evens wrote:
> 
> Marcel (marcel@javanet.com) wrote:
> [Much snippage.]
> 
> : Experiments have been done in electromagnetics. One experiment that comes to mind is the
> : famous "Philadelphia" Experiment. I know, it's been covered up by the government for a
> : long time, but the data gathered from this could be quite useful in furthering research
> : in the "possibility" of c+ travel. If a way to "drop out", if you will, of this
> : "universe" were possible, then would not we be able to attain c+ travel? The other
> : possibility would be that we would not be travelling faster than light, but, rather,
> : utilize space curvature to get to where we want to go. In essence, "hyper-space".

I read an interesting bit of fiction regarding "hyper-space"...
For some reason humans desperately needed some form of FTL.  A scientist
mathmatically proved the existance of and a method of getting into
"hyper-space".  He kept trying to get the government to notice and fund
his project and he kept getting passed over in favor of "goof-ball"
theories.
He finally storms into the office of the scientist in charge of
allocating
research money and demanded an explanation.
The Chief scientist replied that they had discovere "hyper-space" a long
time ago and that light move *slower* in "hyper-space" than it did in
"normal space".
Just something to keep those mental wheels turning :).
-- 
Jim Batka	Email:  jim.batka@sdrc.com
Contrary to popular opinion, the word "gullible" is not in
(American) Dictionaries.
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Satellite--Geosynchrous Orbit Question
From: Richard Mentock
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 11:04:01 -0500
Alexander Freudenberg wrote:
> you can do the calculation yourself using the following informations.
> In order for a satellite to stay at a fixed position above the earth,
> it has to rotate around the centre of the earth with the same angular
> velocity like our planet: 1 day or 86400 seconds. You can take the
Nit:  Earth revolves in about 4 minutes less than 86400 seconds.
-- 
D.
mentock@mindspring.com
http://www.mindspring.com/~mentock/index.htm
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Where's the theory? (was: Specialized terminology)
From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 16:23:17 GMT
weinecks@mail1.sas.upenn.edu (Silke-Maria  Weineck):
[to Anton]
>I am sorry to see the anxiety that interpretation evokes 
>in you; I can't help you with that, though. 
   Prescription for Anton -- take two Fish and call me in the
morning.  (You'll say, "Good-bye, and thanks for all the Fish!")
-- moggin
Return to Top
Subject: Re: What is a constant? (was: Sophistry 103)
From: Anton Hutticher
Date: 15 Nov 1996 04:11:36 GMT
moggin@mindspring.com (moggin) wrote:
>
> Anton Hutticher :
>  
> >> >So far we know about your philosophical stance only that it enables
> >> >you to claim that people are inveterate liars.
> 
> moggin:
>  
> >>    As I recall, "inveterate liar" was your phrase, aimed at me.   I've
> >> never used it.
> 
> hoh@rmb.co.za wrote (Hardy Hulley):
> 
> >Your very reply to Anton's post is yet further evidence of your
> >dishonesty. You addressed only his claim about "inveterate liars", but
> >refused to engage his demonstration of why your initial claim about
> >logical positivism was wrong.
> 
>    Half-right.  Anton has a habit of making groundless attacks, like
> the above.  In this instance, he even managed to attribute one of his
> own claims to me, and then attack me for it.  That disinclined me
> to pursue the conversation any further, especially since I already
> supplied exactly what Anton was demanding; that is, an explanation  
> of my statement about logical positivism.  But I wasn't dishonest,
> either here or before, so the rest of your assertion is false (if not 
> a case of dishonesty).
But I am not attacking you! 
However, I am glad that you state publicly that you feel so. You see, 
I simply used your style to post loaded statements without telling
anyone that I loaded them with private meanings. You are not overly
bright, remember :-).
As to inveterate liar: There is sufficient evidence that you have very
peculiar notions of true, false, right, wrong, correct....
Your claim that Newton is as wrong as Ptolemy, for instance. It transpires
that for you Newton is always wrong (except if v=0 or c=infinite), because
the slightest deviation in the millionth decimal means its wrong.
Same with the question of the bus conductor (which you did not answer
but evaded, IMHO, btw). Paraphrased, if I understood you correctly, the
bus conductor uses a theory to make his announcement of when the bus
arrives and he gets ever more wrong. Having the wrong theory, he never
can be right, just like Newton.
No scientific theory can ever be right, except maybe the final one, 
according to your usage of right.
Well, what about people, can they generally be right. No, it turns out 
that according to your own philosophy they are inveterate liars. 
"Mrs. Miller, as a witness, you must tell truth. So, tell me how tall
are you. 1m52? Well I see at a glance this is not right, looks more like
1m 51.9 to me. So, in earnest, how tall are you. 1m 51.987345? well,
seems still not right to me. So once again: HOW TALL ARE YOU! WHAT?
1m 51.98734598765432112345678909876543211234567890. THIS IS AS
WRONG AS EVER! 
Your honour, I, moggin the great, proclaim this subject to be an inveterate
liar."
Well, can *you* tell me your precise age, not an approximation, as a
simple number, not an evasion. See, duh.
LIAR!
lire, lire, pant on fiar. 
oops, nonstandard spelling but ordinary meaning
Why are you using these extremely cumbersome definitions of true etc.
They simply mean that people cannot ever tell truth about many properties
of our world. They are *per definitionem (mogginum?)* inveterate liars.
Nor can any scientific theory be right, also by definitionem, but you
do not tell people that little fact. 
The interesting thing is, you felt attacked when I used your peculiar
meanings of truth against you without telling you. Maybe now you get
an inkling of why you caught some flames on the sci. groups.
Well I got on long ago because I was reminded of like statements in 
discussions at our university: You know: "The distance to the moon was
measured not completely correct a hundred years ago, the distance is
being measured not completely right now. Pronouncements on the
distance of the moon have been false and are false. The statements 
of science have been false, are false and will always be false. 
There is no progress in science." 
Thats where I got on.
You have the same debating style as they. You use weird notions of true
etc. without telling people but knowing you mislead them. You do not
change them nor tell about them when politely told the error of your ways
In the end it simply is a power play, where the power of science, which
is perceived as *unjustifiedly* overwhelming, is sought to be reduced to an
equal standing with "alternative realities". 
"Newton always gives wrong results. Einstein most likely always gives
wrong results. Ptolemy gave wrong results" Einstein is as wrong as
Newton as Ptolemy.
No scientific theory can ever be right. So what? (moggin)
No bus conductor can ever be right. 
Nobody can tell truth about his age, height, weight etc.
They are all liars, according to moggin.
That where I get off.
Several other people have told you more or less the same as I have
above, several times
Maybe this tells you something. 
You once said (IIRC) that it does not matter how 
many people are against you if they are wrong. *if* .Maybe among a 
million people disagreeing with you there is a chance that one is 
brighter ( or just more competent in a certain field) and is more 
likely to be right than you.
So I did not intend to attack you. I simply did to you as you did to
the science camp. And it irked you and you felt attacked.
> >Your strategy in this discussion (but,
> >abundant elsewhere, as well) is (a) make outrageous claims, (b)
> >dissemble when caught out, and (c) focus on another topic when (b) is no
> >longer sustainable. You are the very model of an intellectual rogue -
> >the canonical product of your master, Derrida.
> 
>    A.   While I'm capable of making "outrageous claims," I haven't
> offered any lately.  
you are repeating the old ones: 
> B.  False.  C.  Also false.  
Under what meaning of "false".
Anton Hutticher
(Anton.Hutticher@sbg.ac.at)
I will be temporarily off the net since I am going 
on a postdoc in Montreal, Canada, next week. 
Responses this week, please or in e-mail (which will be 
forwarded to me, but I don´t know when).
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Time & space, still (was: Hermeneutics ...)
From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 16:38:00 GMT
lew@ihgp167e.ih.att.com (-Mammel,L.H.):
>>>He also supplies the famous quote where Newton calls action-
>>>at-a-distance,
>>>         ... so great an absurdity that I believe no man,
>>>        who has in philosophical matters a competent faculty
>>>        of thinking, can ever fall into it."
moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
>>   Right; that's from the first edition of the _Opticks_.  And as I've said
>>no more than four separate times, at the max, it's true that Newton was,
>>especially at that time, committed to the philosophy of mechanism --
>>which did nothing to prevent him from holding other views, as well.
meron@cars3.uchicago.edu
>In short, we shouldn't consider Newton's views, as expressed by him, 
>to be relevant when discussing Newton's views :-)
   I'm sorry, but that summary has nothing to do with what I said.  
moggin:
>> As
>>I shouldn't have to point out, introducing the notion of gravitas in  the
>>_Principia_ would be enough, by itself, to commit him to action-at-a-
>>distance, even in the absence of any other considerations, since it's a
>>force that exerts itself  across space without any mechanism to account
>>for its workings.  As his contemporaries didn't hesitate to object.
Mati:
>You certainly shouldn't have to point it out, since it would've been a 
>total nonsense.  Newton's law of gravity says that the planetary 
>motion is welll explained by a force proportional to the product of 
>the masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance.  
>This is well supported by observations.  And, that's important, it by 
>no means precludes the existance of an underlying, deeper mechanism, 
>just pleads ignorance of such (as Newton explicitly stated). 
   Yet Newton's theory presented a force, namely gravity, that had
effects across immense distances, and no mechanism by which to
apply itself.  Any self-respecting mechanist would be horrified by
that kind of nonsense, and many were.  Note that the law, taken 
alone (as you'd prefer) explains nothing whatsoever -- as I think
you'd agree, it's only a description.  What makes it into more than 
a simple (or not-so-simple) picture is  the concept of _gravitas_.  
And the force of gravity is an illustration of action-at-a-distance.
> As I've 
>mentioned (so many times that even I'm getting bored with it) physics 
>is pragmatic and when you've something that works, you use it 
>regardless of whether it makes sense to you or not. 
   Why _do_ you keep mentioning it?  It doesn't seem to have any
relevance here.
>The approach of 
>rejecting something that's supported by observations because it 
>disagrees with our philosophical position wouldn't get us very far 
>(though it sure will find lots of support among Galileo's opponents).
   Strawman.
>It's worth mentioning that the electrostatic force (between two 
>charges) is given by a formula identical to the one for Newtonian 
>gravity.  So, is it "an action from a distance".  No, since we know 
>knowadays that it is explained by photon exchange where all the 
>interactions are local (but it certainly wasn't known at the time 
>people started using Coulomb's law).  So there is no contradiction 
>between something appearing as an action at a distance and the 
>existance of an underlying local mechanism.
   Aether served the same purpose in Newton's time, although his 
concept of aether also borrowed from Hermeticism -- or so I've
heard  (it's possible that Lew will correct me).   And what of it?
>These are technicalities, though.  What is important to understand is 
>that the adoption of a physical law in this or other form in no way 
>constitutes an acceptance of this or other philosophical principle.  
>It just constitutes a recognition that said law fits well with 
>available experimental evidence.  In physics evidence is king, not 
>philosophical ideas.
   That _is_ a philosophical idea, d00d -- not the brighest one in
the world, either.  But I've got no interest in arguing with you
about the philosophy of science (or the supposed lack of it).  You
claimed that there was no relation between physics and religious
mysticism.  That's false.  What you meant to say, or should have
said, is that you don't feel the need to accept any mystical beliefs
in order to practice physics the way you're accustomed to.  That
may be so; again, I don't care to argue -- but this ain't about you.
-- moggin
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Subject: Re: Pope votes for Evolution (was Re: Creation VS Evolution)
From: Jim Batka
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 11:16:01 -0500
Steve Jones - JON wrote:

> Well this mean that all the Catholics have to now get behind the theory
> of evolution. Its only the soul bit to go.
Sorry to burst your bubble, but most American (Roman)
Catholics already ascribed to various theories of evolution.
The Pope's announcement just made it "official".  Kind'a like
pardoning Galileo and admitting he was right.
The religious "nu-nus" you've been debating with are mostly
Protestants.
(I'll be slipping into my asbestos long-johns now :)
PS I saw some statistics which showed that Catholics &
Mormans were the 2 christian religions with the highest
percent of members holding bachelors+ degrees.  (I believe
Catholics had the highest percent of graduate & second
highest undergrad while the Mormans were the converse).
-- 
Jim Batka	Email:  jim.batka@sdrc.com
Contrary to popular opinion, the word "gullible" is not in
(American) Dictionaries.
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Subject: Re: Time & space, still (was: Hermeneutics ...)
From: CharlieS
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 16:59:42 -0800
Andrew Dinn wrote:
> 
> Russell Turpin (turpin@cs.utexas.edu) wrote:
> 
> : Jeff Inman (jti@coronado.santafe.edu) wrote:
> : > The step between CM and GR may be "well defined, explicit, and clear"
> : > without implying that the metaphysical underpinings of CM are clearly
> : > continuous with those of GR.  It only works in retrospect, as a sort
> : > of "fixing" of what was understood in the past.  But, in fact, the
> : > nature of what an "object" was in CM and what it is in GR is vastly
> : > different.  Before you can understand what Newton means when he speaks
> : > of an "object", you must enter a different world.  ...
> 
> : Nonsense.
> 
> : GR can extend CM only *because* they share common, operational
> : notions of time, space, and many other common concepts.  For both
> : Einstein and Newton, time is measured by regular physical
> : processes, i.e., clocks.  If Newton were to pop forward to the
> : 20th century, he would NOT say of GR: What a strange concept of
> : time!  It uses the same operational concept he used, indeed, the
> : same operational concept used by every chef in boiling an egg.
> : Rather, he would say: so a clock accelerated away and back
> : *really* runs at a different rate from the one that stayed in
> : place?  The amazing thing is NOT the "metaphysical underpinning,"
> : which hasn't changed one bit, but a surprising fact about how
> : time works across great distances and changes in speed.
> 
> Err, ... nonsense.
> 
> The notion of time used in GR is based on the motion of light 
                                               ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Err,...
Isn't the entire point of GR the idea that time and space are
inseperable and dependant on each other?  As you cover greater
and greater distances at greater and greater "speeds", time
_slows down_ in response.  At the "speed" of light, the theory
says that time *stops*.  So in a very important sense, light 
*doesn't* move because it doesn't experience an increase (or
decrease for that matter) in time.  So its possible to view
a "photon" as a portion of space in which the dimension of
time is *zero*.  IOW light seems to be *outside* of time (from
a photon's point of view anyway...).  As far as I see it, "time"
is a phenomenon of _matter_, so to base your time keeping on 
a "property" of light is missing the point IMO: you always have
to relate the _apparent_ speed of light to the time dimension
experienced by *matter*.  And if you do that, you are relating
time to _gravity_.  IOW relativity *needs* and presuposes 
Newton's "big stick in a glass case" to measure gravity before
it can make any claims about how relative frames of reference
experience differences in time.  So rather than abandoning
Newton's conception of time and space as being absolute (with
some finite *positive* dimension), GR just turns CM on its head
by saying the only "absolute" about time is *zero* time, or
timelessness.  
> just as
> the notion of distance is based on the wavelength of light. Newton's
> notions of space and time are based on a big stick in a glass case and
> a mechanical device with a particular period of oscillation.
> 
> Operationally (which Russell is so keen to stress) these are utterly
> distinct notions as they are based on distinct practices (of
> measurement). Pragmatically, they consistently arrive at the same
> outcomes when employed by scientists. To the extent that in almost all
> cases where it is possible to employ either form of measurement
> whichever one is chosen will be deemed acceptable by all scientists.
> 
> Andrew Dinn
> -----------
> And though Earthliness forget you,
> To the stilled Earth say:  I flow.
> To the rushing water speak:  I am.
CharlieS
Return to Top
Subject: Re: Cryonics bafflegab? (was re: organic structures of consciousness)
From: lbsys@aol.com
Date: 15 Nov 1996 16:40:47 GMT
Im Artikel <56gqa5$ano@ren.cei.net>, lkh@mail.cei.net (Lee Kent Hempfling)
schreibt:
>>I snooped around on Mr. Hempfling's home page, and, yes, as it turns
>>out, he does appear to have  strong religious beliefs.
>
>You find a problem with Jew being a Jew? You and Hitler too? 
The former poster didn't refer to any specific religion - and he certainly
made no attempt to make an antisemitic comment. But of course yelling
'Hitler' will put an end to any argument - as you very well know and
probably intended.
The most dangerous untruths are truths slightly deformed.
Lichtenberg, Sudelbuecher
__________________________________
Lorenz Borsche
Per the FCA: this eMail adress is not to 
be added to any commercial mailing list.
Uncalled for eMail maybe treated as public.
Return to Top
Subject: Re: q: the splitting of energy levels of amonia
From: breed@HARLIE.ee.cornell.edu (Bryan W. Reed)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 17:17:52 GMT
In article ,
Hernan Altman   wrote:
>
>I've been reading the third volume of Feinman's Lectures in Physics
>(Quantum Mechanics) for a while, and I came up with a question that is
>really bothering me.  I would appreciate if you take some time to answer.
>
>In his chapter about the Hamiltonian Matrix he writes about the amonia
>atom (NH3).  He explains its energy levels split in two because of the two
>possible arrangements of the N with respect to the plane formed by the
>H's. 
>
>The question is:  
>
> Although both positions of N are simmetrical, the split of energy levels
>produce a high energy and a low energy level.  You can't possibly say that
>each level corresponds to a different position of N, since both the
>positions are symmetrical, and the levels aren't.
>
>1) Do this two levels of energy correspond to two states of the amonia or
>don't they?
>
>Furthermore, the transition probability between the two energy levels
>changes harmonically with time.
> 
>2) How can this transition probability be identical for both the process
>of going from a low energy level to a higher one and the reverse process
>(identical aside from the shift in phase between the two) ?   
>
>This two processes are definitely not symmetrical, but the transition
>probabilities act as they were.
>It looks as the two different "energy levels" had the same energy!
>
Sounds like you're being confused by the change of basis.  The "N above"
and "N below" (I don't recall what Feynman calls them) states are NOT
the energy eigenstates.  The energy levels are superpositions of N-above
and N-below.  Conversely, N-above and N-below are superpositions of the
energy levels.  In both cases the two orthogonal superpositions are
distinguished by a single minus sign (a relative phase shift of 180 degrees).
So in fact it isn't really right to say that N-above and N-below have
different energies.  In fact, neither one alone has a single energy at
all.  Both states have two equally likely energies.
True energy eigenstates don't undergo transitions (if you see it happen in
a textbook, then it's because what you've been calling the energy eigenstates
are really the zero-order energy eigenstates, before perturbation by an
interaction Hamiltonian).  They are "stationary" in the quantum sense, with
only their overall phases changing in time (and in some representations,
even the phase doesn't change).  So in the energy basis you've got two possible
states, each of which just sits there, with the nitrogen atom sort of
half-above and half-below.
In the nitrogen position basis, you've got a superposition of energy states,
each of which is rotating in phase at a different rate.  As a result the
phase difference between them varies linearly in time.  Since the phase
difference between the energy states is what distinguishes N-above from N-
below, you get transitions between the two states.  The nitrogen atom
periodically bounces up and down.
You're right to think that symmetric situations should give you symmetric
results--and this holds in this example, but it's not completely obvious,
as you pointed out.  The only apparent asymmetries in the results are
due to arbitrary overall phase factors that have no physical meaning.
This is a famous example intended to get you to think in terms of changing
bases and the importance of phase shifts.  If you fully understand this
problem, you've actually gone a long way toward understanding the basics
of quantum.  There's still a lot of details to understand, but the really
fundamental ideas of quantum are all in this single problem.  Keep asking
questions and thinking about it until you feel you understand--then you'll
be well-equipped to tackle the rest of quantum mechanics.
Another thing--the transition probabilities between (zero-order) energy
states do tend to be the same for the forward and reverse processes.  The
two processes are actually symmetrical, under the operation of time reversal.
Except for some fairly exotic nuclear processes, quantum mechanics has a
very nice time-reversal symmetry.  But don't worry about that just yet.
Have fun,
breed
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Subject: Re: supersonic combustion ramjets (scramjets)
From: rmc@silver.sni.ca (Russell Crook)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 11:52:19 -0500
schumach@convex.com (Richard A. Schumacher) writes:
>>>Given the age of the concept (I remember reading about scramjets in the 70s),
>>>and the simplicity of scramjet implementation (once you have the
>>>shockwave physics and heating problems out of the way :->), and the
>>>obvious improvements that could be made in booster or SSTO performance
>>>and cost if you could use air for your oxidizer for more of the boost phase,
>Funny thing about the obvious: it's often wrong.
>1. Propellants are the cheapest single item in launching
>   anything to orbit. Liquid oxygen in bulk is cheaper 
>   than beer. Development costs, capital, handling,
>   everything else is more expensive. Spending billions to
>   make the cheapest component cheaper still is senseless,
>   unless the goal is to run a welfare program for aerospace 
>   industry managers and engineers. To build a commercially
>   successful launch system instead of a research vehicle or
>   a curiosity, one must focus on (a) economy, (b) economy, 
>   and (c) economy. Not performance.
Ahem.
This ignores the fundamental exponential characteristic of performance
versus mass ratio. If using air as an oxidizer (vs. cheap LOX) can
improve the *effective* specific impulse of the fuel to the point
where you do not need multiple stages, or allow a useful
payload that is not a tiny fraction of the overall mass, then yes,
improving the cheap fuel costs is very important, as you  save lots
of costs on not throwing away expensive hardware, and using *much* less
fuel per pound of orbited payload.
And, of course, as orbiting payloads becomes routine, the fuel costs become
more significant.
>2. One gets useful thrust from any variety of jet engine
>   by throwing the combustion products out the back end faster
>   than they entered at the front. When the incoming air is
>   moving more than Mach 4 or so it's extremely difficult to
>   heat it enough during the short time it's inside your
>   engine so that it leaves at a noticeably higher speed.
>   And when screaming along at Mach 4 you have a whopping 3%
>   of the energy required for orbit, so you still need
>   rockets for the other 97%.
Mach 4 is easily in the realm of *subsonic* combustion ramjets, *not*
scramjets. Even the Bomarc-II missile did Mach 4 on ramjets. Scramjets
have the *potential* of perhaps half of orbital velocity (Mach 15 or 
so). And, again, if that makes SSTO with decent payload possible, this
really makes a big fuel+cost win possible.
>   
>3. Tearing along at Mach 4 you'd better be above 99% of the
>   atmosphere lest you become a meteor. Precious little 
>   oxidizer available up there.
Now you know why the materials problems are a little ... interesting...
and why I asked if a scramjet had ever been *flown*.
Mach 4 is NOT a problem though. The YF-12A and SR-71 Blackbirds
routinely went that fast (within atmosphere, I must point out).
Mach 15  may well not be feasible, although the whole China Clipper
project presumed it would be (possibly using active cooling).
Also, one could resort to ablative techniques and replaceable
surfaces if necessary.  In short, there are engineering problems
that need to be looked at under *flight* conditions ... which gets
back to the original question ... has anyone, anywhere, actually
built and *flown* a scramjet??
-- 
Russell Crook, Siemens Nixdorf Document Management Systems    NETTDIR/AETTDIO!
6375 Shawson Drive, Mississauga, Ontario Canada L5T 1S7   Tel: +1 905 819 5933
Email: rmc@sni.ca, uunet!snitor!rmc NERV: rmc.tor         Fax: +1 905 819 5949
"To know everything would be impractical.  The access time would be enormous."
Return to Top
Subject: Re: What is a constant? (was: Sophistry 103)
From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 16:07:06 GMT
Anton Hutticher :
>> >So far we know about your philosophical stance only that it enables 
>> >you to claim that people are inveterate liars. 
moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
>>    As I recall, "inveterate liar" was your phrase, aimed at me.   I've
>> never used it.
Anton:
>I didn´t say you used it. I said your philosophy enables you to claim
>that people are inveterate liars.
   If I haven't called anyone an inveterate liar, then how do you know?
And more generally, _what_ are you going on about?
-- moggin
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Subject: Re: Hermeneutics and the difficulty to count to three...
From: moggin@mindspring.com (moggin)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 16:19:15 GMT
moggin@mindspring.com (moggin) wrote:
>>    I admit, it's hard for me to grasp the idea of a hill that's flat,
>> but that's probably because I'm thinking of my sort of hills -- if
>> you're giving the term your own definition, there's no reason in
>> the world hills couldn't possess flatness as a characteristic.   I
>> wouldn't even call that a "loose" use of the word, since there's no
>> larger notion of hilliness for me to measure by -- it's just a
>> different way of using the word.
Anton Hutticher :
>May I hazard a guess? (I think hazard is the right term here).
>Could your difficulty stem from the following (and this is just my
>unbridled speculation): You hold an object in your mind which has
>"hilliness" as one of its characteristics, another one with "planeness"
>and possibly one with "holeness". (Is a hole a reversed hill, btw. And
>it should have been plane in my first post. I guess I was already 
>roaming the great plains, in my mind). Well, since "hilliness" etc are
>ideal properties which cannot change there can not ever be a mix of 
>"hilliness" and "planeness" ranging from "100% hilliness, 0% planeness" 
>to "0% hilliness, 100% planeness".
   It's not half that complicated -- as I already explained,  I'm using "hill"
in the usual sense, where a flat hill is an oxymoron.  If you want to give
the word another definition which allows for hills to be flat, you go ahead.
   From the looks of it, though, you don't want to posit flat hills -- you're
just making the earth-shaking observation that some hills are tall, while
others are short.  I can go along with that one.  But in the ordinary sense
of the term, a perfectly flat plane ("100% planeness) doesn't qualify as
a hill -- in fact, "hillness" would be the common description of that kind
of landscape.
>Which would also explain your troubles with the common and scientific usage
>of words like true,  false, correct, incorrect...Just a platonic speculation.
   Just an unnecessary explanation, like the one above, since I' m not having
any trouble with them -- I don't know what difficulties you're referring to,
but they're entirely yours.
-- moggin
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Subject: RE: Spellbound
From: mellyrn@enh.nist.gov
Date: 15 NOV 96 15:53:30 GMT
In a previous article, lbsys@aol.com wrote:
->Im Artikel <328B52A7.17B5299F@alcyone.com>
-> 
->>I guess they didn't learn that in the Autodynamics school.  
->>(Amusingly enough, there answers aren't even write.)
-> 
->Cool, too bucks in one line :-)
-> 
->This has been fascinating me since I read s.p.: First I observed myself
->spelling words wrong b/c there existed another word with the same or
->almost the same pronounciation, and I thought it happened to me only b/c
->I'm not a native speaker. But then I realized I happens to others just the
->same (whom I suspect to be natives :-). The most common pairs being
->twisted are AFAICT:
-> 
->their / there
->right / write
->to / too / two
->of / off
->then / than
-> 
->And some of the most prominent are definitely not just spelling errors,
->e.g. _their_ vs. _there_. This indicates to me that we do not think in
->written syllables, but in 'heard' ones, thus sound is by far more
->important to speech then scripture. Which of course devalidates another
->argument in the 'metric' thread: the notion that differentiating between
->'meter' and 'metre' would be of any help to distinguish between the device
->and the measure. IMO spelling in the english language is the most
->prohibitive barrier to this otherwise (in its *basics*) easy to learn
->language - always in rememberance of GBS' cheap shot: How'dya spell
->"fish"? Yup, "GHOTI"! Comments?
AFAIK, the concept of orthography, the idea that words should be
spelled in one and only one way, is fairly recent.  Over in the
"How much math?" thread, folx have argued that math is being used
to keep the unclean masses out of the sacred temple of science; it
seems to me that orthography can be used the same way, to separate
the Learned from the ignorant.  I am living proof that this is silly
-- I am "eulexic"; I spell better than my spell-checker; if you
judge people's worth on how well they conform to spelling standards,
then I must seem one of the Greatest People in the English-speaking
World.
Unfortunately, I can't find my way out of the proverbial paper bag.
So, even though spelling correctly is one of the few things I do
really well (or maybe because of it?), I find it difficult to
support the idea that orthography is in any way essential, or even
significant, to "real" education.  There are precious few occasions
when a nonstandard spelling seriously corrupts the intended meaning;
as lbsys@aol.com notes, we *do* "think in 'heard' syllables" and as
long as a familiar sound can be worked out, so can the intended
meaning.
It's possible that orthography might help to brake linguistic
diversification; otherwise one day New-Jerseyese might write "bk"
and North-Carolinian might write "boowuck", and a speaker of
Californian might never know that "book" was meant in each case.
That in no way explains why Americans put gravy on their "biscuits" 
and the English dip theirs in tea, though.
---mellyrn
-----------------------------------------------------
speaking only for myself
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Subject: Re: Sophistry 103 (was: I know that!)
From: weinecks@mail2.sas.upenn.edu (Silke-Maria Weineck)
Date: 15 Nov 1996 15:23:07 GMT
Hardy Hulley (hoh@rmb.co.za) wrote:
: Silke:
: > You misunderstood; do you have an _original_ cite for that?
: In other words, I should have been sensitive to your *intentions*, and
: not to your words. More decon hypocrisy, perhaps?
Perhaps not; you know, you are beginning to sound like a Kagalenko clone, 
but you don't mind, perhaps? Brian has already addressed your cites, so I 
won't bother -- but if you read his response, you will know by know that 
you haven't proven anything of what you wanted to prove --- for a 
scientist, that would be a humiliating experience.
: Silke:
: > You're not an academic, huh? Let me fill you in on the customs of the
: > tribe: a) says "text soandso is blablabla." b) asks: "what part of the
: > text do you base that judgment on?" a) answers, "well, here on page xx,
: > the author says, etc.etc."
: I'll leave theories concerning my vocation (and all other facile
: speculation) in your very capable care. The rest of your paragraph
: attests only to your deficient comprehension. Firstly, I made no claim
: of the form "text soandso is blablabla". I made a claim about
: deconstructionism as a philosophical movement (a potent oxymoron) - as
: such, I am free to corroborate my statement by appealing to any informed
: authority on philosophical movements in general. Secondly, you did not
: ask: "What part of the text do you base that judgement on"? Your
: question was: "Do you have a cite for that"? I supplied such. The word
: "text" hadn't entered into the exchange, until your ill-considered
: reply, above.
Okay, you don't know what you're talking about, but you're happy to take 
the word of others as gospel as long as it corroborates your prejudice. 
Well, congratulations, Hardy, you're really something; just the type I 
like to judge "philosophical movements."
: The subject of discussion was the foundations of a particular movement,
: not the content of any particular "text", as you imply. 
Hardy, philosophy consists of texts. You want to comment on a particular 
brand, you'll have to refer yourself to a text, or many texts. THat's so 
elemental that I've decided you must be a troll who has chosen this 
particular venue to discredit opposition to deconstruction.
But you're a waste of time either way.
Silke
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Subject: Re: Cryonics bafflegab? (was re: organic structures of consciousness)
From: wowk@cc.umanitoba.ca (Brian Wowk)
Date: 15 Nov 96 16:25:44 GMT
In <328B633C.5A05@ccgate.dp.beckman.com> Paul Brown  writes:
(pejoratives deleted)
>Try freezing a head of lettuce for a couple of days and then thawing it
>out. That gooey mess of green slime is just about what those frozen
>human heads will look like when they're thawed.
	Sure, *IF* you straight-freeze a brain with no cryoprotectant.
But how is that relevant to brains that are perfused with 7 Molar
glycerol, and then frozen?  If you thaw such a brain, you will find
the following:
>>>>>>>>
Preservation of Ultrastructure
The most striking difference between this work and previous 
brain cryopreservation studies is the overall recognizability,
inferrability and even "normality"; which is present in the micrographs.
(Figures 40, 41, 42) Examination of neuropil, individual synapses and
axons at magnifications from 40,000x to 80,000x reveal excellent
preservation of fine structure (Figures 43, 44, 45). Synapse
morphology is normal in appearance and synaptic vesicles, membrane
structure and general appearance are almost indistinguishable from
unglycerolized, nonfrozen control, (Figure 46) and are virtually
indistinguishable from glycerolized-fixed non-frozen controls
(Figure 47). The relationship of the neurons to each other and of
fine processes such as dendritic spines seems very well preserved
with exception of the occasional 5-10 micron tears or fissures.
<<<<<<<
excerpted from http://www.cryocare.org/cryocare/bpi/tech16.txt 
Also see http://www.cryocare.org/cryocare/casecryo.txt
>Come to think of it, if you do not agree with the current medical
>definition of dead, and you freeze someone who is not really dead
>(destoying most of the cells in his body), are you not guilty of
>murder?
	No, you are guilty of providing the best possible medical
care you can to a terminal patient with a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR)
order on them.  If you can recommend anything less murderous than
cryoprotected freezing (or vitrification) in such cases, we're all
ears. 
>Unless you can find a way to sufficiently solubilize the cell membrane
>so that it does not burst upon freezing (which is done on a regular
>basis with bacteria), it won't work. Science has already disproved it.
	Yea, like rockets won't work in space because there's no
air to push against.  Can we at least aknowledge in this thread
that there is a field of science called "cryobiology", and that
organized mammalian tissue masses (though not yet large organs) 
are routinely stored in liquid nitrogen and revived?
	Reminds me of the journalist visiting Kitty Hawk early
this century who asked what the buzzing noise *overhead* was.
The townsperson replied, "It's those crazy Wright brothers.  They
think they can fly." 
***************************************************************************
Brian Wowk          CryoCare Foundation               1-800-TOP-CARE
President           Human Cryopreservation Services   cryocare@cryocare.org
wowk@cryocare.org   http://www.cryocare.org/cryocare/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Subject: Re: Creation VS Evolution
From: ssimpson@cnwl.igs.net (IG (Slim) Simpson)
Date: Fri, 15 Nov 1996 17:25:05 GMT
Judson McClendon  wrote:
>IG (Slim) Simpson wrote:
>> 
>> Judson McClendon  wrote:
>> 
>> >> Judson McClendon wrote:
>> [big snip]
>> >So the God who created this vast universe, and us, has put up with a
>> >rebellious bunch of humans for thousands of years, watching us kill,
>> >steal, lie, cheat and so on.  So He sends His own Son Jesus to take our
>> >sins upon Himself and die a horrible death on a Roman cross to pay the
>> >penalty for those sins.  Then He tells us that all we have to do is
>> >believe on Jesus and receive Him as Savior and Lord and God will
>> >completely forgive us all our sins and give us eternal life as a
>> >reward.  And you call that God a 'kill-joy'.
>> 
>> Judson, god hasn't told *me* anything of the sort! If your post,
>> including the snip, were to have "God" replaced with ET, you would be
>> judged insane by many people. Myths hold no compulsion with me.
Why quote from a book that , for the most part, I don't accept. If I
quote from the Koran (Sp?) will it make any difference to you??
Slim
>Romans 1:18-32:
>18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all
>ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who suppress the truth in
>unrighteousness,
>19 because what may be known of God is manifest in them, for God has
>shown it to them.
>20 For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are
>clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His
>eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse,
>21 because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God,
>nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their
>foolish hearts were darkened.
>22 Professing to be wise, they became fools,
>23 and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made
>like corruptible man-- and birds and four-footed animals and creeping
>things.
>24 Therefore God also gave them up to uncleanness, in the lusts of
>their hearts, to dishonor their bodies among themselves,
>25 who exchanged the truth of God for the lie, and worshiped and
>served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever.
>Amen.
>26 For this reason God gave them up to vile passions. For even their
>women exchanged the natural use for what is against nature.
>27 Likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned
>in their lust for one another, men with men committing what is
>shameful, and receiving in themselves the penalty of their error which
>was due.
>28 And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God
>gave them over to a debased mind, to do those things which are not
>fitting;
>29 being filled with all unrighteousness, sexual immorality,
>wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, strife,
>deceit, evil-mindedness; they are whisperers,
>30 backbiters, haters of God, violent, proud, boasters, inventors of
>evil things, disobedient to parents,
>31 undiscerning, untrustworthy, unloving, unforgiving, unmerciful;
>32 who, knowing the righteous judgment of God, that those who practice
>such things are worthy of death, not only do the same but also approve
>of those who practice them.
>-- 
>Judson McClendon
>Sun Valley Systems    judsonmc@ix.netcom.com
Beowulf     How ceaselessly Grendel harassed.....
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