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Post by bussit on Oct 27, 2015 4:35:51 GMT -7
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Post by lordkundalini on Oct 27, 2015 6:25:29 GMT -7
have to watch this when i get home.
its more about where awareness is focused than time moving.
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Post by dewme on Oct 27, 2015 9:47:48 GMT -7
I've seen this concept explained better than this video. I will look for it in the furue and come back and post it here in my past.
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Post by ragedoses on Oct 27, 2015 9:50:25 GMT -7
is reality really meant to be understood?
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Post by gbfan on Oct 27, 2015 10:06:43 GMT -7
trippy
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Post by lordkundalini on Oct 27, 2015 10:09:19 GMT -7
is reality really meant to be understood? yes..
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Post by bussit on Oct 27, 2015 12:05:33 GMT -7
I've seen this concept explained better than this video. I will look for it in the furue and come back and post it here in my past. please do.
If you want a lot of technical info on the arrow of time, check out Sean Carroll's book From Eternity to Here. I just finished it earlier this afternoon and it was really cool, kind of dense but cool.
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Post by bussit on Nov 3, 2015 16:37:29 GMT -7
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Post by bussit on Nov 10, 2015 13:15:51 GMT -7
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Post by bussit on Nov 17, 2015 15:35:17 GMT -7
Scientists at the National Institute of Standard and Technology (NIST) have proven beyond reasonable doubt that Einstein was wrong about one of the main principles of quantum mechanics and that "spooky action at a distance" is actually real. We are now certain that entanglement, the ability of particles to affect each other regardless of distance, exists and that it's an intrinsic property of the universe. When a pair or a group of particles are entangled, they cannot be described independently from each other. Measuring a particular property, like velocity, of a single particle affects all the other entangled particles. Einstein and many other scientists believed that this phenomenon was paradoxical, as it would allow for information to be exchanged instantaneously across vast distances. He dubbed it "spooky action at a distance" and he believed that there was a way to reproduce this phenomenon with classical physics. He claimed that there were hidden variables – quantities that we didn't or couldn't know – that would make quantum mechanics perfectly predictable. According to classical physics, the universe can be completely understood, modeled, and predicted by simply knowing the laws of physics. This is known as a deterministic view. Quantum mechanics is probabilistic, puts limits on the amount of understanding one has of a system and is rife with peculiarities that we don’t experience in everyday life. While trying to investigate the consequence of this alleged paradox in 1964, physicist John Stewart Bell formulated a theorem (Bell's theorem), which states that quantum mechanics cannot be explained using any deterministic theory. The validity of the theorem has been corroborated with many experiments over the years, but now scientists are certain that it’s correct. This new research from NIST has shown that quantum mechanics cannot be explained in a deterministic way. They created pairs of entangled photons with highly correlated polarizations. They separated the photons and sent them into two distant rooms to have their polarization measured. The settings of the apparatus that measured the polarization were picked at random for every photon; this was to ensure that if unknown effects were present, they didn't come from the measurements themselves. To be published in Physical Review Letters, the photons the scientists observed were perfectly entangled. The probability that this was due to hidden variables was estimated to be 1 in 170 million, well beyond the 5 sigma (1 in 3.5 million) limit necessary in physics to announce a discovery. “You can’t prove quantum mechanics, but local realism, or hidden local action, is incompatible with our experiment,” Dr. Krister Shalm, lead author of the study, said in a statement. “Our results agree with what quantum mechanics predicts about the spooky actions shared by entangled particles.” www.iflscience.com/physics/scientists-prove-spooky-action-distance-absolutely-real
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2015 15:58:48 GMT -7
Are you majoring in physics Bussit?
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Post by bussit on Nov 17, 2015 16:32:49 GMT -7
nope
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2015 19:24:50 GMT -7
Just watching that first video Bussit. The concept of space-time is so trippy/fascinating. Enter the fourth dimension...
Singularity'd
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2015 19:26:44 GMT -7
Astrophysics is such a fascinating field. I can only handle this stuff when my brain is ready. When it is I'm typically blown away..
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Post by bussit on Dec 22, 2015 5:30:23 GMT -7
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Post by lordkundalini on Dec 22, 2015 7:06:14 GMT -7
im a giant fan of entanglement. i often contemplate that the top of the pyramid, the all seeing eye, is that which is entangled with everything somehow someway.
it is all about probabilities for me.
great post on that
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Post by bussit on Mar 17, 2016 3:48:40 GMT -7
How to separate scientific fact from fiction
NEW YORK – It’s been a tough year for science. The American Statistical Association just issued a statement scolding scientists for misusing statistical analysis. Scientists continued to fight over an evaluation of 100 psychological studies, most of which could not be reproduced. Critics have cast doubt on a widely believed psychological theory of human willpower.
So yes, science is fallible. Scientists are only human and science is not a synonym for truth. It’s a bumpy, meandering road that heads in that general direction. That makes skepticism good, up to a point. Beyond that point lie nonsense and superstition. The Earth really is round.
So how do you tell what to believe?
It’s a very old question. But there’s no need to go back to Plato. Let’s just start in the early 1950s, when the Nobel prizewinning chemist Irving Langmuir laid out a set of warning signs about identifying scientific ideas that might not conform to reality. He gave a handful of examples of what he called pathological science, including N-rays and mitogenic rays, neither of which exist despite being observed and measured in dozens of peer-reviewed experiments.
Something similar may be happening now with a psychological phenomenon known as ego depletion. The theory holds that humans can store up limited supplies of self-control. In the seminal 1997 experiment that seemed to confirm this theory, students who were allowed to eat radishes while foregoing a plate of cookies did worse on a subsequent task than students who were allowed to eat the cookies. Many more studies appeared to confirm the conclusion that will power weakens as it’s used, like a tired muscle. But a new paper reports that recent attempts to replicate the evidence turned up no effect at all.
An article in Slate last week called this cause for alarm:
If something this well-established could fall apart, then what’s next? That’s not just worrying. It’s terrifying.
The situation with N-rays was pretty similar, according to Langmuir. Multiple experiments not only appeared to confirm their existence but break them down into different components whose optical parameters were measured with great precision.
In the 1920s, hundreds of papers were published on mitogenic rays, which scientists thought radiated from plants. Statistical analyses seemed to confirm that rays from onion roots would bend the orientation of other nearby onion roots unless they were separated by glass, which was thought to act as a ray blocker. It took years for scientists to come to the realization that these phenomena did not exist.
But scientists in physics and chemistry have learned from their mistakes. Langmuir saw a pattern to suspect science, which he reduced to six symptoms. One of the most relevant pertains to statistics — essentially that findings that are later discredited tend to be subtle effects, hard to distinguish mathematically from random noise.
Modern statistical tools can tease out subtle phenomena, but if not used carefully, they can also fool people into seeing patterns and trends that aren’t there.
The American Statistical Association came out this week with a statement outlining ways that scientists were using statistical tools incorrectly. The association’s director, Ron Wasserstein, said the statement was prompted by concerns that misuse of statistics was contributing to a proliferation of questionable results, especially in the social sciences.
It was, however, the psychology community that recognized there might be a problem. In 2010, a paper claiming evidence for extrasensory perception got into a respected journal. Alarmed psychologists wondered whether other unlikely results had squeezed through the filters. Sure enough, a controversial paper published last summer claimed that of 100 psychology experiments, only 39 could be replicated. That figure has been disputed, ironically, on the grounds that the replicating team made statistical errors.
It’s not that social scientists are bad at math. They’re not. But statistical analysis can fail from wishful thinking and subtler forms of self-delusion. Physical science has been around longer and has had more time to learn from past mistakes.
It’s also harder for social scientists to recognize another of Langmuir’s symptoms of pathology: “fantastic theories contrary to experience.” This is related to the mantra that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, which was apparently conceived of by the 18th-century philosopher David Hume but articulated succinctly by the 20th-century celebrity astronomer Carl Sagan.
Physicists today have broad, well-tested theoretical frameworks, and if a claim falls outside, they give it a closer look before believing it. That gives them an efficient means of expelling bunk.
For example, several years ago, physicists reported that a particle called a neutrino might have moved faster than the speed of light. Since this would violate Einstein’s theory of relativity, the community was skeptical despite mathematical calculations showing high statistical significance. The experimenters took a closer look and found a loose cable. Fixing it showed the neutrinos followed the laws of physics after all.
In the late 1980s, physicists claimed to have found a groundbreaking new form of energy known as cold fusion. Immediately physicists around the world tried to replicate it, and some got positive results. It took awhile for the physics mainstream to agree it didn’t exist, but when the stakes are high enough, things eventually get sorted out.
Last month, scientists claimed they confirmed Einstein’s theory in the form of gravitational waves, and that result has been more readily accepted. Climate change, while still uncertain in some of the details, is widely accepted because it’s consistent with well-known physics and chemistry, not just because of some published papers. Carbon dioxide, oxygen, nitrogen and other gases interact with sunlight in well-defined and well-tested ways. We know how much carbon dioxide has increased in the atmosphere and how that decreases the amount of the sun’s energy that gets radiated back to space.
Social science doesn’t have that kind of framework. Theories have limited domains. ESP sets off alarm bells because it would require some extraordinary physical mechanism. Ego depletion’s extraordinariness is harder to gauge.
The psychologist George Loewenstein, who has also written on the reproducibility problem, says the recent attention is already catalyzing better practices. That was the purpose of Langmuir’s warning half a century ago. He was not trying to flag cheating, but to explain instances in which scientists were “led astray by subjective effects, wishful thinking or threshold interactions.” Loewenstein tells his students to consider not just how to look for evidence that an idea is right, but how they might discover it’s wrong. That’s a critical thinking skill we all can use.
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Post by bussit on Apr 26, 2016 16:44:16 GMT -7
Feynman is on the mount rushmore of science pimps
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Post by bussit on May 12, 2016 17:19:48 GMT -7
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Post by shark58 on May 14, 2016 23:01:47 GMT -7
42
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