Discussion:
wave/particle duality of spacetime?
(too old to reply)
Dale
2015-11-13 02:16:37 UTC
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of what little I know spacetime is presented as a four dimensional
wave

is there a particle nature and if so what is it?

is there a "nothing" particle for space and time=0?

can you really repeat cosmological spacetime? if you start it over
will you be there to measure it?

again, of what little I know the only empiricism of spacetime is light
waves being bent around the Sun, does this hold true for space=0 and
time=0?
--
Dale
http://www.dalekelly.org
Olrik
2015-11-13 04:38:09 UTC
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Post by Dale
of what little I know spacetime is presented as a four dimensional
wave
is there a particle nature and if so what is it?
is there a "nothing" particle for space and time=0?
can you really repeat cosmological spacetime? if you start it over
will you be there to measure it?
again, of what little I know the only empiricism of spacetime is light
waves being bent around the Sun, does this hold true for space=0 and
time=0?
I like the fact that you posted your crap to newsgroups that can't
answer your stupid questions.

Ever tried alt.physics, or other relevant groups?
--
Olrik
aa #1981
EAC Chief Food Inspector, Bacon Division
raven1
2015-11-13 14:25:47 UTC
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Post by Dale
of what little I know spacetime is presented as a four dimensional
wave
No it isn't.
Post by Dale
is there a particle nature and if so what is it?
is there a "nothing" particle for space and time=0?
can you really repeat cosmological spacetime? if you start it over
will you be there to measure it?
again, of what little I know the only empiricism of spacetime is light
waves being bent around the Sun, does this hold true for space=0 and
time=0?
Bob Casanova
2015-11-13 19:18:55 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 12 Nov 2015 21:16:37 -0500, the following appeared
Post by Dale
of what little I know spacetime is presented as a four dimensional
wave
That does indeed show what little you know, since it's
wrong.

<snip "fruit of the ignorance tree">
--
Bob C.

"The most exciting phrase to hear in science,
the one that heralds new discoveries, is not
'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'"

- Isaac Asimov
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