On Tue, Jun 3, 2014 at 7:08 PM, John Ross <jr...@trexenterprises.com> wrote:

> If you identify a volume  and remove everything within it, you would be
> left with empty space in the volume.
>

And that is exactly what Euclid would say, but we've learned a few things
in the last 2500 years and today we know that it is physically impossible
even in theory to remove everything from within a volume.

 > That is what I mean by empty space and you could not curve that space.
>
> Why not?

> What do you mean by:  There is no Coulomb force?
>

Which word didn't you understand? There are only 3 forces in nature,
Gravity, The Strong Nuclear Force, and The Electroweak; "the Coulomb force"
isn't on the list.


> > Did you ever comb your hair on a dry day?
>

Yes.

> I don’t believe in virtual photons.
>

Virtual photons either exist or they don't and it doesn't matter a hoot in
hell if you believe in them or not. And the damn things work! Dirac used
quantum mechanics and virtual particles (which don't exist according to
you) to predict antimatter, and Feynman used virtual particles to predict
the Lamb shift. Feynman also predicted in 1948 that the magnetic moment of
an electron can't be exactly 1 as had been previously thought because it is
effected by an infinite (and I do mean infinite and not just astronomical)
number of virtual particles (which don't exist according to you). He
brilliantly figured out a way to calculate this effect and do so in a
finite amount of time, he calculated it must be 1.00115965246, while the
best experimental value found much later is 1.00115965221. That's like
measuring the distance between Los Angeles and New York to the thickness of
a human hair. In fact it would be hard to find ANY calculation in modern
particle physics that doesn't involve some form of virtual particles.

There is no theory in all of science that produces predictions of greater
accuracy than the theory of Quantum Electrodynamics and virtual photons.
None.
Do you really thing that virtual photons don't exist and it was just a
coincidence that calculations using them produced such astronomical
accuracy??!


> > I do believe in entrons
>

So using your theory of "entrons" what do you calculate the electron's
magnetic moment should be? How do "entrons" produce the Casimir Effect and
exactly how strong do you predict it should be? What do you figure the Lamb
Shift should be? Can you beat Feynman in the accuracy of predictions
department?

>  think about it.  You need a lot of energy to hold a galaxy together.


You need exactly as much energy as you need to keep the Earth circulating
around the sun, zero. The gravitational attraction is exactly canceled by
the centrifugal acceleration.

 > My model predicts that a Monster Black Hole will develop near the center
> of our Universe
>

The universe has no center.

> A triangle drawn on a sphere will be curved.
>

Yes, and the surface of a 4D sphere is 3D space and it too will be curved.

> Curving space makes no sense to me.
>

That doesn't surprise me in the slightest, I have yet to find one single
discovery made in physics in the last 200 years that DOES make sense to you.

> Curving Coulomb grids is natural since [...]
>

There is no such thing as curving or un-curving Coulomb grids just as there
is no such thing as "the Coulomb force".

 > I don’t claim to be an expert on the tau and the muon.  However, I
> believe they are both merely high-energy electrons,
>

Then you are a very silly man.

 John K Clark

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Everything List" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to