John, about being a"nut" when you think out of the box people havent
got a book to study up on you So many people in the past were labelled
"nuts" long after they had passed away.
George Green a mathematicician from Nottingham was not in with the no
alls and yet nowadays his work is still in use in engineering but
others have polished up some of what he found and laid claim to it.
Very few people now a days knows of this George Green.
Then there was that guy more than two thousand years ago who found a
round stone that was flat on both sides and the guy wheeled that thing
around while his friends called him "nuts"
One day he tried rolling the thing uphill until a dinasaw came along
and ofcourse he ran like hell but the stone cought up with him and
killed him. So the guy who invented the wheel and was called a "nut"
passed away And the name of the man that invented the wheel remains a
mystery for ever, even tho his nuts were preserved to be used a few
centuries later to make a vehicle by Henry Ford.
There is no glory to be obtained by thinking outside the box!
John Smith wrote:
wrote:
Art,
You'd get a lot more people who would be able to listen to what you're
saying if you drew a picture and posted it somewhere.
Dan
Dan:
I think we have arrived at the quantum/nano level here, you know,
entangled particles, particles which can be in two places at once,
particles which exceed the speed of light, it is a no mans land.
Indeed, it takes guts to just attempt a discussion on the subject ...
We tend to think at large levels, wavelengths traversing long stretches
of conductors, whole capacitor plates, etc. Naturally, even if one is
stating correct facts on a quantum level he is going to called an
idiot--if he attempts to even advance a theory which encompasses the
above, who can resist laughing? None-the-less, it is true, the world of
physics becomes upside down (apparently, with our present
understanding.) Who can tell a "nut" at this level, everyone is going
to look the same here. grin
Regards,
JS