> I'll have to read it again, and again, and possibly again, since I do not as yet understand it, and how you reached your conclusions at the end. CMIIAW, but non-local means instantaneous action at a distance, so I don't see from your long post how you conclude that the future can influence the past. AG
Why not accept that physics is local? AG
> Why not accept that physics is local? AG
> if Bob is traveling away from Alice, don't their clocks cease to be synchronized, or are you already assuming that? AG
> I don't see how MW solves this problem.
> If their clocks aren't synchronized as Bob moves away from Alive, Bob cannot conclude that Alice received his reply an hour before she sent the question.
> Since the clocks aren't synchronized, when Bob looks at Alice's clock, it reads 2 hours, not 1 hour. So I don't see any contradiction to be resolved.
> Also, since SR is a local theory, and you can live with a local theory,
> why apply MW?
> You don't need it.
> The only problem I see, is that Bell experiments suggest the universe is non-local, and/or that QM is non-local. Do you agree? AGs
On Mon, Oct 14, 2024 at 3:39 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Since the clocks aren't synchronized, when Bob looks at Alice's clock, it reads 2 hours, not 1 hour. So I don't see any contradiction to be resolved.In Special Relativity Bob sees Alice's clock running at half the speed of his clock, and Alice sees Bob's clock running it at half the speed of her clock, this is because both of them can think of themselves as being stationary and the other one as being the one that is moving close to the speed of light. This situation may seem odd but it is not logically paradoxical if instantaneous communication is impossible, but if it turns out to be possible then there are problems, serious problems. Bob looks at his clock and it says two hours, but he knows that Alice's clock must read one hour because it is running at half speed, and he knows that the instantaneous message receiving screen on Alice's spaceship must say "the answer to your question how much is 11+3 is 14" because Bob just sent that message and it is instantaneous. So Alice received the answer one hour before she thought of the question.> Also, since SR is a local theory, and you can live with a local theory,Many Worlds is also a local theory.> why apply MW?Because without MW Special Relativity would produce logical contradictions if instantaneous communication was possible.> You don't need it.Many Worlds is compatible with non-locality but it doesn't require it, that's why it's called local. When you decide to turn left rather than right the universe splits, and you can imagine that the split propagates outward at the speed of light,
or you can imagine that the split travels instantly,
it makes no observable difference. So as far as locality is concerned Many Worlds can take it or leave it.> The only problem I see, is that Bell experiments suggest the universe is non-local, and/or that QM is non-local. Do you agree? AGsNo, I do not agree! The violation of Bell's Inequality proves that if quantum mechanics is deterministic and local then it cannot be realistic. As I said before, the universe cannot be realistic and local and deterministic, at least one of those three things must be wrong but we don't know which one.
I suspect realism is wrong but I could be wrong.
I'm 85% sure Many Worlds is right, maybe 90%, but not 100%.
r
>> The violation of Bell's Inequality proves that if quantum mechanics is deterministic and local then it cannot be realistic. As I said before, the universe cannot be realistic and local and deterministic, at least one of those three things must be wrong but we don't know which one.
> You keep claiming this is true, but I haven't seen it proven, or if you proved it I didn't get it.
> isn't it generally accepted that QM is non-local?
> SR says instantaneous propagation is falsified.
In Special Relativity Bob sees Alice's clock running at half the speed of his clock, and Alice sees Bob's clock running it at half the speed of her clock, this is because both of them can think of themselves as being stationary and the other one as being the one that is moving close to the speed of light. This situation may seem odd but it is not logically paradoxical if instantaneous communication is impossible, but if it turns out to be possible then there are problems, serious problems. Bob looks at his clock and it says two hours, but he knows that Alice's clock must read one hour because it is running at half speed, and he knows that the instantaneous message receiving screen on Alice's spaceship must say "the answer to your question how much is 11+3 is 14" because Bob just sent that message and it is instantaneous. So Alice received the answer one hour before she thought of the question.
The violation of Bell's Inequality proves that if quantum mechanics is deterministic and local then it cannot be realistic. As I said before, the universe cannot be realistic and local and deterministic, at least one of those three things must be wrong but we don't know which one.
On Mon, Oct 14, 2024 at 8:53 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> The violation of Bell's Inequality proves that if quantum mechanics is deterministic and local then it cannot be realistic. As I said before, the universe cannot be realistic and local and deterministic, at least one of those three things must be wrong but we don't know which one.> You keep claiming this is true, but I haven't seen it proven, or if you proved it I didn't get it.Using nothing but high school algebra and trigonometry Bell proved in 1964 that it would be logically impossible to violate an inequality that he found IF you assume that things were deterministic, AND they existed in one and only one state before they were measured, AND messages could not be transmitted faster than light. But experiments show that his Inequality IS VIOLATED , therefore at least one of his three assumptions must be untrueI did my best to explain to you how Bell came up with his inequality but you still don't get it and I am sorry about that.
But professional quantum physicists certainly get it, that's why two physicist got the Nobel Prize in 2022 for performing loophole free experiments proving that Bell's Inequality is indeed violated, there is no longer any doubt about it.It's just a fact, there may be consequences from violating Bell that some find philosophically unsettling, but that doesn't stop it from being a fact. You've either got to change your philosophy or decide that you don't mind having a philosophy that contains logical contradictions.> isn't it generally accepted that QM is non-local?NO! It is UNIVERSALLY accepted that things could still be local IF messages can be sent faster than the speed of light, OR IF things can be in more than one definite state before they are measured.> SR says instantaneous propagation is falsified.
Special Relativity is a theory and in physics a theory can't falsify anything, only an experiment can do that. And Bell's inequality has been falsified, like it or not we're just going to have to live with the consequences of that fact.
In Special Relativity Bob sees Alice's clock running at half the speed of his clock, and Alice sees Bob's clock running it at half the speed of her clock, this is because both of them can think of themselves as being stationary and the other one as being the one that is moving close to the speed of light. This situation may seem odd but it is not logically paradoxical if instantaneous communication is impossible,
but if it turns out to be possible then there are problems, serious problems. Bob looks at his clock and it says two hours, but he knows that Alice's clock must read one hour because it is running at half speed, and he knows that the instantaneous message receiving screen on Alice's spaceship must say "the answer to your question how much is 11+3 is 14" because Bob just sent that message and it is instantaneous. So Alice received the answer one hour before she thought of the question.,
> You're making an error here in assuming Bob and Alic are equivalent, an error often made when analyzing the Twin Paradox. Only Bob experiences acceleration so they're not equivalent.
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On Tue, Oct 15, 2024 at 8:49 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> You're making an error here in assuming Bob and Alic are equivalent, an error often made when analyzing the Twin Paradox. Only Bob experiences acceleration so they're not equivalent.So start the experiment with Bob and Alice synchronizing their clocks, shaking hands and then both of them accelerating by the same amount but in opposite directions for X amount of time as read by their own clocks. After that Alice would see that Bob's clock was running slow, and Bob would see that Alice's clock was running slow, this may seem odd but effect never comes before cause unless messages could be sent instantaneously.
On Tuesday, October 15, 2024 at 7:18:17 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Oct 15, 2024 at 8:49 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> You're making an error here in assuming Bob and Alic are equivalent, an error often made when analyzing the Twin Paradox. Only Bob experiences acceleration so they're not equivalent.So start the experiment with Bob and Alice synchronizing their clocks, shaking hands and then both of them accelerating by the same amount but in opposite directions for X amount of time as read by their own clocks. After that Alice would see that Bob's clock was running slow, and Bob would see that Alice's clock was running slow, this may seem odd but effect never comes before cause unless messages could be sent instantaneously.This is not how the apparent paradox is resolved. If it were, then SR would no longer be local and the future could effect the past, violating causality. Do you think this was Einstein's intent and belief as the content of SR? AG
>> start the experiment with Bob and Alice synchronizing their clocks, shaking hands and then both of them accelerating by the same amount but in opposite directions for X amount of time as read by their own clocks. After that Alice would see that Bob's clock was running slow, and Bob would see that Alice's clock was running slow, this may seem odd but effect never comes before cause unless messages could be sent instantaneously.
> This is not how the apparent paradox is resolved.
> If it were, then SR would no longer be local and the future could effect the past, violating causality.
> So why do you insist that messages can be sent instantaneously?
hwt
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On Wednesday, October 16, 2024 at 7:51:20 AM UTC-6 Alan Grayson wrote:On Wednesday, October 16, 2024 at 7:04:59 AM UTC-6 Alan Grayson wrote:On Wednesday, October 16, 2024 at 5:17:25 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Oct 15, 2024 at 10:37 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> start the experiment with Bob and Alice synchronizing their clocks, shaking hands and then both of them accelerating by the same amount but in opposite directions for X amount of time as read by their own clocks. After that Alice would see that Bob's clock was running slow, and Bob would see that Alice's clock was running slow, this may seem odd but effect never comes before cause unless messages could be sent instantaneously.> This is not how the apparent paradox is resolved.It's resolved because although both see the other's clock as running slower than their own clock, and they can't agree what "simultaneous" means, both of them agree that cause always comes before effect, neither of them see time running backwards, and neither of them can returned to the spot where they started their journey before they started it. The situation is still odd because watching a friend go close to the speed of light is radically different from our everyday experience, but it produces no paradoxes.By the way, I don't think it will happen but if a way to send messages instantaneously was ever discovered that would be extremely strong evidence that Many Worlds must be correct because, as I explained before, it's the only way I can think of of making that particular logical paradox go away, if anybody can think of another way I'd love to hear it. However if somebody proved that instantaneous communication is physically impossible (I have no idea how you'd do that but never mind) that would not indicate Many Worlds is wrong because, although it doesn't need non-locality to work, it isn't destroyed by it either. As far as locality is concerned Many Worlds can take it or leave it. By contrast pilot wave theory needs non-locality or it won't work.> If it were, then SR would no longer be local and the future could effect the past, violating causality.Special Relativity doesn't violate causality because it says nothing can travel faster than light do to the fact that the faster you go the larger your effective mass becomes, so it would take an infinite amount of energy to reach the speed of light, and that much energy is simply not available in our universe.> So why do you insist that messages can be sent instantaneously?What the hell?!You're responding to a post I deleted. AG
> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for Alice
> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.
> Obviously, there's a major problem here and I suspect it's related to your interpretation of relative clock rates in SR.
> I can't say exactly what's the problem with your interpretation of relative clock rates. Nor do I understand what this has to do with the viability of MW.
On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for AliceYes.> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.
> Obviously, there's a major problem here and I suspect it's related to your interpretation of relative clock rates in SR.It's odd, no doubt about it, but it causes no physical paradoxes IF nothing can travel through space faster than the speed of light.
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:20:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for AliceYes.> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.I know that! You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards), and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1, before she sent the question. I remember that clearly. No one claimed her clock was running backwards. So, without instantaneous anything how is the paradox resolved, and how is this related to MW? TY, AG
> Obviously, there's a major problem here and I suspect it's related to your interpretation of relative clock rates in SR.It's odd, no doubt about it, but it causes no physical paradoxes IF nothing can travel through space faster than the speed of light.Ostensibly, there is a paradox and you seem unable to resolve it. Claiming it is "odd" fails to resolve the matter. I think Brent knows the solution. AGSpace itself can move at any speed without producing paradoxes. If there existed particles that moved through space faster than the speed of light (called Tachyons ) and it was possible for us to interact with them, then causality would be violated. And if Bob and Alice used tachyons instead of light photons to observe then they would see the others clock moving backwards, not just slowing down. And you'd be able to observe and even kill your grandfather 10 years before he met your grandmother, and you'd have to deal with all the paradoxes that would produce. But as far as we can tell Tachyons do not exist.> I can't say exactly what's the problem with your interpretation of relative clock rates. Nor do I understand what this has to do with the viability of MW.I was just making the point that if Tachyons existed (and I do NOT think they do) then the only way I can think of to resolve the grandfather paradox is through Many Worlds. If you or anybody else can think of another way to resolve it I'm all ears.John K Clark See what's on my new list at Extropolisdeq
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Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 14:14, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:20:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for AliceYes.> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.I know that! You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards), and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1, before she sent the question. I remember that clearly. No one claimed her clock was running backwards. So, without instantaneous anything how is the paradox resolved, and how is this related to MW? TY, AGThe paradox is resoved if there is mo ftl... please do a work on yourself and try to understand what others are saying...
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 7:31:32 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 14:14, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:20:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for AliceYes.> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.I know that! You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards), and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1, before she sent the question. I remember that clearly. No one claimed her clock was running backwards. So, without instantaneous anything how is the paradox resolved, and how is this related to MW? TY, AGThe paradox is resoved if there is mo ftl... please do a work on yourself and try to understand what others are saying...Anyone can say anything, including yourself, but that's not a proof of anything. At best it's claim. AG
--> Obviously, there's a major problem here and I suspect it's related to your interpretation of relative clock rates in SR.It's odd, no doubt about it, but it causes no physical paradoxes IF nothing can travel through space faster than the speed of light.Ostensibly, there is a paradox and you seem unable to resolve it. Claiming it is "odd" fails to resolve the matter. I think Brent knows the solution. AGSpace itself can move at any speed without producing paradoxes. If there existed particles that moved through space faster than the speed of light (called Tachyons ) and it was possible for us to interact with them, then causality would be violated. And if Bob and Alice used tachyons instead of light photons to observe then they would see the others clock moving backwards, not just slowing down. And you'd be able to observe and even kill your grandfather 10 years before he met your grandmother, and you'd have to deal with all the paradoxes that would produce. But as far as we can tell Tachyons do not exist.> I can't say exactly what's the problem with your interpretation of relative clock rates. Nor do I understand what this has to do with the viability of MW.I was just making the point that if Tachyons existed (and I do NOT think they do) then the only way I can think of to resolve the grandfather paradox is through Many Worlds. If you or anybody else can think of another way to resolve it I'm all ears.John K Clark See what's on my new list at Extropolisdeq
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On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 7:31:32 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 14:14, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:20:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for AliceYes.> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.I know that! You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards), and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1, before she sent the question. I remember that clearly. No one claimed her clock was running backwards. So, without instantaneous anything how is the paradox resolved, and how is this related to MW? TY, AGThe paradox is resoved if there is mo ftl... please do a work on yourself and try to understand what others are saying...Anyone can say anything, including yourself, but that's not a proof of anything. At best it's claim. AG
Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 15:56, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 7:31:32 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 14:14, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:20:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for AliceYes.> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.I know that! You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards), and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1, before she sent the question. I remember that clearly. No one claimed her clock was running backwards. So, without instantaneous anything how is the paradox resolved, and how is this related to MW? TY, AGThe paradox is resoved if there is mo ftl... please do a work on yourself and try to understand what others are saying...
Anyone can say anything, including yourself, but that's not a proof of anything. At best it's a claim. AG
? If there is no ftl, there is no paradox, ftl brings a paradox because the simultaneity plan is different for alice and bob. That's just SR, that's just what JC said and he's not claiming anything afaics.
> You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards),
> and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1,
> No one claimed her clock was running backwards.
> What about the case of two observers moving toward each other, and each seeing the other's clock running slower as they pass each other? An apparent paradox? How is this situation resolved, assuming no FTL? AG
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 8:05:10 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 15:56, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 7:31:32 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 14:14, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:20:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:
On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for Alice
Yes.
> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.
No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.
I know that! You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards), and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1, before she sent the question. I remember that clearly. No one claimed her clock was running backwards. So, without instantaneous anything how is the paradox resolved, and how is this related to MW? TY, AG
The paradox is resoved if there is mo ftl... please do a work on yourself and try to understand what others are saying...
Anyone can say anything, including yourself, but that's not a proof of anything. At best it's a claim. AG
? If there is no ftl, there is no paradox, ftl brings a paradox because the simultaneity plan is different for alice and bob. That's just SR, that's just what JC said and he's not claiming anything afaics.
Another claim. The only thing lacking is a proof. Moreover, you're factually mistaken. There IS an apparent paradox without FTL. The paradox is how can Bob and Alice see the other's clock running slower. AG
On 10/17/2024 7:16 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 8:05:10 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 15:56, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 7:31:32 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le jeu. 17 oct. 2024, 14:14, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:20:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:
On Thu, Oct 17, 2024 at 1:14 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> Ostensibly, applying SR, Bob concludes Alice's clock is running slower than his, and vice-versa for AliceYes.> so you conclude Alice get Bob's response to her question before she sends it.
No. Watching somebody's Clock that is running slower than your clock does NOT mean you are observing their time running backwards.I know that! You claimed from Bob's pov, Alice's clock is running slower (not running backwards), and when he sends his reply his clock reads 2, whereas Alice's clock reads 1, before she sent the question. I remember that clearly. No one claimed her clock was running backwards. So, without instantaneous anything how is the paradox resolved, and how is this related to MW? TY, AGThe paradox is resoved if there is mo ftl... please do a work on yourself and try to understand what others are saying...Anyone can say anything, including yourself, but that's not a proof of anything. At best it's a claim. AG? If there is no ftl, there is no paradox, ftl brings a paradox because the simultaneity plan is different for alice and bob. That's just SR, that's just what JC said and he's not claiming anything afaics.That's not a paradox and was only so named because it confounded Newtonian intuition.Another claim. The only thing lacking is a proof. Moreover, you're factually mistaken. There IS an apparent paradox without FTL. The paradox is how can Bob and Alice see the other's clock running slower. AG
If you plot the ticking of two moving clocks along their worldlines and then Lorentz transform your diagram you seem that it is inevitable that each sees the other's clock as running slow.
What irritates me is you are full demands for proof, but never do the work to prove something to yourself.
On Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 4:43:31 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 10/17/2024 7:16 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:
That's not a paradox and was only so named because it confounded Newtonian intuition.Another claim. The only thing lacking is a proof. Moreover, you're factually mistaken. There IS an apparent paradox without FTL. The paradox is how can Bob and Alice see the other's clock running slower. AG
I wrote APPARENT PARADOX. Best to read carefully before throwing stones. AGIf you plot the ticking of two moving clocks along their worldlines and then Lorentz transform your diagram you seem that it is inevitable that each sees the other's clock as running slow.Yes, that's REALLY obvious. Let me say it again. What you write above is OBVIOUS. And in fact one doesn't need worldlines to see that once one knows that in SR a moving clock appears to run at a slower rate compared to the clock rate of a stationary observer. HOWEVER, it surely appears inherently contradictory if two observers moving in opposite directions, pass by each other, and each views the other's clock as running slower. This is the issue I'd like to resolve, but don't know how. So I ask the "experts", some of whom might reside on this MB, and often suffer undeserved mockery when my question goes over their heads (since they can't distinguish what they know, from what they don't know). AGWhat irritates me is you are full demands for proof, but never do the work to prove something to yourself.
Like I just wrote, I have no clue how to prove what I want to understand, and now I see you have no clue what the/my problem is. AG