-----------------
Einstein s 'curved space'
is for retarded cheating physicists
gravity is a property of mass!!
NO MASS - THE ONLY MASS-
--NO REAL PHYSICS !!!
see better the Circlon idea
ATB
Y.Porat
-----------------------
Mass is one of two forms of energy that flow in two ways in space.
Mass is infinitely concentrated energy that weighs.
The spread out or continuous form of energy density never does.
The circlon idea is right. The Shells of the atom for electrons are
round.
Mitch Raemsch
IT IS INEVITABLE !!!
2
The Shells of the atom for electrons are
> round.
> ----------------------
with that i dont agree with you
the shells of electrons are extending from the nuc to a specific
direction and not all around!!
if all the Atom including the nuc are rotating--
you get the impression that
that they describe a circle
yet it is only while the whole Atom
(including the nuc.)
is rotating in the *gaseous* state !!!
> Mitch Raemsch
ATB
Y.Porat
-------------------------
Aether is round in gravity.
Mitch Raemsch
Burt: It's round very close to the Earth, but is spiral, gradually,
from a mile or two up. Tell me, Burt: Why does the shape of the graph
of gravity forces matter so much to you? — NE —
Aether is round contiguously in gravity and ends at its range.
There space is flat.
Mitch Raemsch
I don't follow your question.
Mitch Raemsch
I have never heard Newton talking about gravity as round geometry.
Geometry came with Einstein. Why are you claiming this?
Aether wave-energy particles float in round gravity of orbit.
Mitch Raemsch
Einstein, the Moron, thought gravity was warped space and time. He
certainly didn't think the plots were spherical, because he spent a
decade writing an equation to match Mercury's orbit, which he knew
couldn't be explained by Newton. So, Burt, you're crediting Einstein,
the MORON with things science had attributed to Newton for about two
centuries. — NoEinstein —
Androcles: I looked at your white dots on the black background
graft. I would be happy to consider giving you an explanation, if you
would link me to the verbal data that should accompany the graph.
Thanks! YesAether, or — NoEinstein —
==============================================
http://www.britastro.org/
-- The British Astronomical Association or BAA.
V 1493 Aql -- the designation of a particular star.
JD -- the Julian Date between July through December 1999.
Vertical abscissa -- m = magnitude; the lower the number
the brighter the star is. Magnitude is logarithmic.
Not knowing that is like not knowing what a toothbrush
in the bathroom is for.
Hint: the toothbrush is for plaque removal, the hairbrush is for
lice removal, the loo brush is for shit removal-- you are incredibly
naive if you do not know this.
OK, Burt. Then, answer this: Why do you claim that gravity
progression is "round" i.e., spherical, when that was disproved over a
century ago? All of the painfully slow work that Einstein did with GR
was to explain the "non spherical" observations for the moons of
Jupiter and the precession of the orbit of the planet Mercury. —
NoEinstein —
Actually, it was Newton who showed that elliptical orbits, hyperbolic
orbits, parabolic orbits, and other non-circular orbits are all
solutions of a spherically symmetric gravitational law. His law also
predicts that the elliptical orbit of a planet will precess, though it
didn't quite get the right number for that precessional rate for
Mercury.
Might do you some good to stop talking out of your hat. It only makes
you look quite a bit foolish.
PD
But I think NoEinstein has a much better theory for that. This Newton of
yours is just for eggheads that spend too much time in the library, in
my view..
> Might do you some good to stop talking out of your hat. It only makes
> you look quite a bit foolish.
Ehh.. yes, what is the problem?
All great minds are considered foolish by their mediocre contemporaries.
I'm sure NoEinstein knows exactly how to value their opinions!
--
John
And what's your metric for whether a theory is better or worse? I'm
just curious.
> This Newton of
> yours is just for eggheads that spend too much time in the library, in
> my view..
Well, ok, that's your view, but apparently you haven't spent any time
with investigators that actually make measurements and do experiments.
You don't do that in the library.
>
> > Might do you some good to stop talking out of your hat. It only makes
> > you look quite a bit foolish.
>
> Ehh.. yes, what is the problem?
>
> All great minds are considered foolish by their mediocre contemporaries.
> I'm sure NoEinstein knows exactly how to value their opinions!
It really doesn't matter how NoEinstein values their opinions. Just
because he's different doesn't automatically make him a great mind.
Park-bench mutterers are also different, but they ain't great minds,
either.
>
> --
> John
Strange.. It's so obvious! The better theories of course are not coming
from a moron like Einstein (NoEinstein explained that perfectly already)
and they certainly should not depend on fluxions or angels dancing on
needle points or other fairy tale fantasies. A simple nononsense
approach like noEinstein is using, that's a good theory!
...
>>> Might do you some good to stop talking out of your hat. It only makes
>>> you look quite a bit foolish.
>>
>> Ehh.. yes, what is the problem?
>>
>> All great minds are considered foolish by their mediocre contemporaries.
>> I'm sure NoEinstein knows exactly how to value their opinions!
>
> It really doesn't matter how NoEinstein values their opinions. Just
So, what is your metric for which things actually do matter, PD?
--
John
I see. So just to see if I have you right, it's your position that the
simpler a theory is, regardless whether it agrees with any
experimental result -- or hell, whether it predicts any quantitative
result at all -- the better it is. And the more it relies on
commonplace, everyday concepts, then the better it is.
And anybody who suggests that nature is not as simple as it first
appears, well, that person is a moron. Have I got it right?
>
> ...
>
> >>> Might do you some good to stop talking out of your hat. It only makes
> >>> you look quite a bit foolish.
>
> >> Ehh.. yes, what is the problem?
>
> >> All great minds are considered foolish by their mediocre contemporaries.
> >> I'm sure NoEinstein knows exactly how to value their opinions!
>
> > It really doesn't matter how NoEinstein values their opinions. Just
>
> So, what is your metric for which things actually do matter, PD?
In science, John, the usefulness of a theory is based on how well it
works in practice, how accurately it predicts the measurable outcomes
of things under the widest possible set of applications. While it is
essential that the proposer of the theory make clear where the
distinguishing measurable predictions of the theory are, it is others
who assess how well that works out, by doing independent, corroborated
measurements that test those predictions. It is never the proposer of
the idea who assesses the quality of the idea. It is those who use the
idea that determine its success.
That's NoEinstein's difficulty, you see. He declares himself a genius,
and he believes that everything he says is right, without benefit of
corroborated checking. This is a practice of megalomaniacs with severe
personality disorders. He knows this, but tries furiously to cover it
up.
It would help, John, before you judge scientists, if you knew how they
worked.
Scientsist's need to get intellactually honest.
Mitch Raemsch
... nor do detractors, just because they detract, have great minds! —
NoEinstein —
That is of course, true.
However, I do not think that buffoons and braggarts should be stroked
and given positive encouragement.
You fault me for being negative.
But that is an APPROPRIATE response to you when you act the fool, the
pretender, and the egomaniac.
Stop being a fool, a pretender, a braggart, and an egomaniac, and you
will find that people's response to you in general will become quite a
bit more positive.
Please remember this: The negative reactions you so strongly elicit in
others, John, is a reaction to your fearsomely repulsive personality.
PD
Oh, but they do predict a precession of the orbit of Mercury, just not
quite the right value.
> Einstein spent a decade of his
> life writing empirical equations that fit the precise orbit data. All
> of those GPS anomalies are credited as being explained by GR.
GPS has nothing to do with Mercury's orbit, John.
> Sir
> Isaac Newton doesn't get any of the credit, because his spherical
> "Universal Law of Gravitation" is wrong! — NoEinstein —
Well, in that case, GR must be right where Newton is wrong, because GR
gets the number right where Newton's theory gets it wrong.
Your idea doesn't get any number one way or the other, so it's not
deserving of any credit at all.
This is in your imagination. What on earth gives you the impression
that many people are reading your posts?
> Unlike you, I don't shotgun replies all over the
> groups. I don't understand how you can beat Google's time limit with
> your many replies. In the past you have discounted the readership of
> my posts, because sci.physics is unmoderated. The latter groups are
> where the real science nut cases reply! If you dislike sci.physics
> because there is no moderator, why do you pester me here, daily?
I pester you for the reason I told you. Buffoons, clowns, and idiots
who set fire to themselves draw spectators.
People like you are superb at self-justification. If you draw no
attention, then you take it as implicit endorsement. If you draw
attention, then you take it as touching a nerve and therefore you must
be right. You simply cannot fathom the possibility that the reaction
you get is because you don't know what you're talking about. Your
mental condition prevents the acknowledgment of that option.
> It's
> because you go where the intellect is, so that you can be a
> detractor. Sad, very sad. — NE —
I come here for entertainment and the occasional interesting
discussion. You are not involved in the interesting discussions, but
you are a good chunk of the entertainment.
Just keep reciting "I know you are but what am I?" It works for 3rd
graders.
Did you ever graduate from 3rd grade, PD? — NE —
What do you mean with "Hide quoted text" and "Show quoted text". BURT?
And why do you forge those remarks into the text of PD's message??
Are you hiding something? That is not very scientific, I would say!
--
John
You don't talk science, John. You talk about something you call New
Science.
But that isn't science at all, for the reasons I've mentioned to you.
And you agree that science is not an activity that you wish to engage
in.
You'd rather do your New Science.
That's fine, just as long as you and others know the difference.