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#1
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Richard Clark wrote:
On Mon, 03 Sep 2007 10:35:50 -0400, Ed Cregger wrote: And who was this Schroedinger guy anyway? He was Lucia's boyfriend who played the Pianoforte. Their lives were humorously chronicled in an illustrated fiction called "Goober Peas." Continuing themes of their friends and relatives populated this series with such stories as the "strange attractors" of kites and trees, or the wave function of a football that couldn't be kicked. The illustrator was purported to be one Eisenstein, but this was later found to be erroneously inferred from earlier cinematic work with similar themes found in "Aleksandr Nevskiy." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Interesting. Did it/he/they have anything to say about visions of silvery and copper colored fingers plucking the harp strings of the seemingly invisible ether? Regards, JS |
#2
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John Smith wrote:
... Did it/he/they have anything to say about visions of silvery and copper colored fingers plucking the harp strings of the seemingly invisible ether? Regards, JS This: "The greatest change in the axiomatic basis of physics - in other words, of our conception of the structure of reality - since Newton laid the foundation of theoretical physics was brought about by Faraday's and Maxwell's work on electromagnetic field phenomena. Faraday must have grasped with unerring instinct the artificial nature of all attempts to refer electromagnetic phenomena to actions-at-a-distance between electric particles reacting on each other. How was each single iron filing among a lot scattered on a piece of paper to know of the single electric particles running round in a nearby conductor? All these electric particles together seemed to create in the surrounding space a condition which in turn produced a certain order in the filings. These spatial states, today called fields, would, he was convinced, furnish the clue to the mysterious electromagnetic interactions. He conceived these fields as states of mechanical stress in an elastically distended body (ether)." (Albert Einstein, 1954) From he http://www.spaceandmotion.com/Physic...trum-Waves.htm Regards, JS |
#3
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John Smith wrote:
Richard Clark wrote: On Mon, 03 Sep 2007 10:35:50 -0400, Ed Cregger wrote: And who was this Schroedinger guy anyway? He was Lucia's boyfriend who played the Pianoforte. Their lives were humorously chronicled in an illustrated fiction called "Goober Peas." Continuing themes of their friends and relatives populated this series with such stories as the "strange attractors" of kites and trees, or the wave function of a football that couldn't be kicked. The illustrator was purported to be one Eisenstein, but this was later found to be erroneously inferred from earlier cinematic work with similar themes found in "Aleksandr Nevskiy." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Interesting. Did it/he/they have anything to say about visions of silvery and copper colored fingers plucking the harp strings of the seemingly invisible ether? Regards, JS The main character in Woody Allen's "Annie Hall" was based upon ether. |
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