Keith Dysart wrote:
You have done this before; postulating
explanations that only work in the complexity
of the "real" world, but fail when presented with
the simplicity of ideal test cases.
For Pete's sake, Keith, Ohm's law doesn't even
work when R=0.
Then, when the explanations fail on the simple
cases, claiming these cases are not of interest
because the real world is more complex.
I define the boundary conditions within which my
ideas work. Whether they work outside those defined
conditions is irrelevant. I believe they do work
for ideal conditions, but I don't have the need
to prove a "theory of everything".
Every model that we use has flaws. Asking me to
come up with a flawless "theory of everything"
model is an obvious, ridiculous diversion but
you already know that.
--
73, Cecil
http://www.w5dxp.com