I was thinking about this earlier, and I think that they are one in the same.
I just imagine that if time was perfectly uniform, and there were parts of it that moved slower, then that would account for forces like gravity. So then particles are just snags in time. Things with mass then...
I'm not an electrical engineer, I just wanted to charge my phone. That's probably why it is so difficult to explain, because I actually just use circles to do math. It works, I use it to solve a lot of problems. Trying to explain it in scientific terms and still nobody seems to understand.
Thanks, but I don't think that vocabulary is the issue.
I will try articulating it better, but most of the time it feels like I'm putting effort into something that will fall on deaf ears, so it isn't worth the extra effort.
My effort:
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The phone is...
Good points, thank you. I don't really know where to find the "right people" but maybe I just should avoid talking about topics that interest me. Maybe also stop listening to people talk about things that I am not interested in unless they reciprocate.
This happens to me frequently, but at this point people think that I'm just trolling when I am not. It is just abstract and I don't know how to communicate ideas effectively. Is this common among intuitive types?
The most recent occurrence was discussing math with people, and people were...
It depends on how you reduce information. If you divide the system into two parts, then one gives the other its value and defines its properties. The fixed or immutable properties and the mutable. Where you draw the divide is a matter of perspective.
For example, you can say that a ball...
Imagination is what many scientists are missing. I think that is what made Einstein unique when compared with most other scientists of his day. You can be incredibly smart and capable of learning and applying science but lack imagination.
Someone brought up the quantum eraser experiment and explained how it goes back in time to affect the past. That is more hogwash in my opinion. If anything, this experiment should prove that particles are not entangled and that there is information hidden across a threshold that we are unable...
Part of me thinks that they must have figured it out back in Einstein's time. They settled on creating a mystery to drive scientists to continue the search because that is where progress is made. Quantum entanglement is like a magic trick. The magician pulls a white rabbit from an empty hat...
Yeah, that is how science works. You have to imagine things and test your hypothesis using experiments that again, you have to imagine first.
And, my make-believe resulted in two accurate discoveries, that probably are in textbooks somewhere. It is described by physicists and mathematicians...
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