America is running out of jobs. It's time for a universal basic income.
http://theweek.com/article/index/267720/america-is-running-out-of-jobs-its-time-for-a-universal-basic-income
quotes
The idea that work is a bedrock of society, that absolutely everyone who
is not too old, too young,
Dear Friends I have just published the second
LENR miniature promised for today:
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2014/09/thinking-about-lenr-and-dikw-scale.html
It is sad but eventually optimistic- like me.
Peter
--
Dr. Peter Gluck
Cluj, Romania
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
The ideas by Marx and Engel were built on the problems in an changing
world. The beginning of the industrialism. Yes, the ideas had perhaps some
political overtones we have a hard time to accept and we know that
particularly in Sovjet it showed its limitations. Reality is of course that
old
I feel that a universal basic income would only work in a society where
there was sufficient mutual trust and undestanding to make it work. The
problem with those who propose such ideas can be that they think that
everyone else is like them. I suspect that if that was the case then
the
Nigel Dyer l...@thedyers.org.uk wrote:
I wonder whether a more workable/realistic alternative is to introduce
artificial inefficiencies into society such that more people need to work.
See Frederic Bastiat, The Candlemaker's Petition:
http://www.econlib.org/library/Bastiat/basSoph3.html#S.1,
I am sure you are right Jed artificial inefficiency (or make-work) is
ridiculous. However, we do not need that. There are many things not
invented yet. (Even LENR might be funded by a few enthusiast having nothing
else to do but what interested them. Even today some people write blog
posts without
I had the pleasure this last spring on one of its most beautiful days to
follow a winding path from one hardware store to the next looking for a
specialized and hard to get part for a piece of antique gardening
equipment. This quest took me deeper and deeper into the countryside until
I found a
About 100 years ago...
On Tuesday, September 9, 2014, Axil Axil janap...@gmail.com wrote:
I had the pleasure this last spring on one of its most beautiful days to
follow a winding path from one hardware store to the next looking for a
specialized and hard to get part for a piece of antique
you make good points but further than that I think that the error is to
imagine that Job as salaryman is required.
in emerging economies you see there is many kind of jobs, and salaryman is
just one fragile but comfortable kind of work.
exploiting your assets (car, room,land, pavement
Stewart isn't that true something well done is pleasure. I do not think it
is because they avoid cars. They just use another set of values. They do
use wheels so some technology is OK. So even if I think that it is
beautiful it is not OK. If we all became that local in a world that is
getting
“Though they be little on earth, they are exceedingly wise.” To what does
this refer? Ants (Proverbs 30:24).
Ants appear only twice in the Bible, both times in the Book of Proverbs
being lauded for their wisdom (Proverbs 6:6-8, 30:24-25). Ants are one of
the world’s oldest and most successful
I wonder if the new Cu is Cu-63? Rossi may be implying that Ni-62 goes to
Cu-63, both of which are stable isotopes. Spin coupling to get rid of the
6.22Mev of excess mass may be the answer--there are no gammas apparently.
Bob
- Original Message -
From: Alan Fletcher a...@well.com
Piantelli showed that a diproton fuses with Ni62 and produces Cu with a
emission of a protons carrying 6 Mev of energy.
IMHO, all fusion occurs with a diproton with zero spin.
Helium-2 or 2He, also known as a *diproton*, is an extremely unstable
isotope of helium that consists of two protons
http://physics.aps.org/synopsis-for/10.1103/PhysRevD.90.052004
If LENR is a mechanism that can amplify quantum tunneling, it might be
conceivable that a LENR reaction will someday reduce the mass of the HIGGS
boson to about 100 GeV. This value will produce a bubble in the higgs field
that will
It appears to me cosmological speculations are getting more more
pseudoscientific. I can't imagine I'm the only one here who believes so.
Also, why would we trust the speculations/projections of Stephen Hawking
necessarily? He has proven himself to be a horrible futurist/oracle in the
past. He
On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 6:14 PM, Bob Cook frobertc...@hotmail.com wrote:
I wonder if the new Cu is Cu-63? Rossi may be implying that Ni-62 goes to
Cu-63, both of which are stable isotopes. Spin coupling to get rid of the
6.22Mev of excess mass may be the answer--there are no gammas apparently.
I wrote:
In a 62Ni(d,p)63Ni reaction, the 63Ni will beta- decay to 63Cu. The proton
will have ~ 5 MeV and will excite 11 keV electrons, which can easily be
shielded. There will be a delayed gamma emission after the beta- decay of
Q=87 keV, however, which will not be fully shielded even by
Eric--
I do not think the reaction of the d,p variety occurs. There are not 87,000 Ev
gammas reported, which would be evident as you suggest. I do not think Ni-63
is involved in the production of Cu-63. Ni-62 removal would be expensive for
Rossi.
Bob
- Original Message -
Hi Bob,
Regarding the existence of the reaction, please see:
https://www-nds.iaea.org/exfor/servlet/X4sSearch5?reacc=28-NI-62(D%2CP)28-NI-63%2C%2CDA
https://www-nds.iaea.org/exfor/servlet/X4sSearch5?reacc=28-NI-62(D%2CP)28-NI-63%2CPAR%2CDA%2C%2CREL
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