So now dark matter don't exist MoND city

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
New measurements support the idea that dark matter doesn’t exist (msn.com) -- 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...@googl

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Things that we're not accustomed to seeing as living or intelligent could exist. Whose job is it to give forth evidence of this? People in the sciences. How likely is this to be a real thing? Unlikely, because I go with the scientists, and nobody is getting a fat budget pursuing this idea. It's

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread John Clark
On Sun, Jan 8, 2023 at 1:09 PM wrote: > *Lets speculate. * > *They ain't things on a planet.* > Irrelevant *> They're highly smart,* > Far far smarter than any human. *> They kinds of things they are, never having been near a gravity well, > seeing it as a threat, would put themselves at risk

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Lets speculate.They ain't things on a planet.They're highly smart,They kinds of things they are, never having been near a gravity well, seeing it as a threat, would put themselves at risk only, yes, for photons. Their communication would look like stellar and cosmological phenomena, stars, neutr

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread John Clark
On Sun, Jan 8, 2023 at 12:01 PM wrote: *> Now, why the hell would you believe an interstellar smart entity like BC > would jabber away or even do broadcasts or narrowcasts just like us???* > Because members of Mr. Cloud's species like to communicate by radio among themselves over vast galactic a

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Well recalling the novella (1957) the predicament was as you have known for years is that Black Cloud needed sunlight to nosh on. What BC didn't know that you, JC already know, was that life was capable of producing life and after an introduction, moved his cloudy ass out of earth's light zone.

Re: How Many Multiverses Are There?

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Ha! Math over Physics??? You sir are no Platonist!! (Labored breathing). I, over the years, go back and forth between math as the first thing, or physics being the first thing, with math heads following along and playing catch up. I am sort of good with math being number 1 because it anticipates

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread John Clark
On Sun, Jan 8, 2023 at 10:55 AM wrote: *> Simply, the smart life in the cosmos is smart clouds perhaps forming a > vast civ?* > I'm not fluent so it took me a while but eventually I figured that "civ" probably means "civilization" in the Spudeze language, if so that certainly doesn't explain why

[no subject]

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Why Many Researchers Now See the Brain as a Quantum System | Mind Matters The battle between physicist, Max Tegmark, and physicist Penrose and anesthesiologist, Hameroff is recalled, before their truce of 20 years ago. The difference was in semantics. For the brain's microtubules, Penrose and Ham

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Simply, the smart life in the cosmos is smart clouds perhaps forming a vast civ? The Life as We Don't Know it, rules. Not necessarily CO2+ H2O brewing up from a planets' chemistry. You said it yourself. Fred Hoyle's The Black Cloud. Yes. It did use radio waves to chat. So, closer to the 1977 WOW

Re: How Many Multiverses Are There?

2023-01-08 Thread Lawrence Crowell
Emmy Noether gave consideration to a boundary term we usually discard when deriving the Euler-Lagrange formula to show that a symmetry was involved with this term. This symmetry and that this boundary term is zero meant a conservation law. A law of physics considered as such is something asso

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread John Clark
On Sun, Jan 8, 2023 at 7:34 AM wrote: *> The Black Cloud is interesting in the fact that Hoyle proposed a highly > intelligent, not biological, non-planetary, life. * Yes. *> This in itself could answer Fermi's Paradox* How do you figure that? John K ClarkSee what's on my new list at Ex

How Many Multiverses Are There?

2023-01-08 Thread John Clark
This is a very good video, it describes the 4 different types of Multiverses that have been proposed. The first is purely a result of considerations from astronomical observations, the second and third come from considerations from both astronomy and quantum mechanics, and the fourth from mathemati

Re: Are we entering a time of no more technological advances?

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
I'd sat Civs are rare and not dead as doornails. We'd have seen crap around stars or solar sails whizzing past. Maybe dead for 5 billion years but until Isaac Newton halts these, onward they go, until entropy kicks in and they still float slow. Maybe Hoyles Black Cloud, eh?  -Original Mess

Re: On The Super Intellect and the cosmos

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Sure. The flip side of this from critics of course, is that one has to create an infinity of universes to battle one God, and maybe not the fellow the ancients ascribed to being the Boss? The Black Cloud is interesting in the fact that Hoyle proposed a highly intelligent, not biological, non-pla

Re: Ethan Siegel the star gazer says that despite dark matter the universe ain't expanding faster

2023-01-08 Thread spudboy100 via Everything List
Ok Jesse, nothing has changed, and the Standard Model seems solid. Shame on Siegel for getting people worked up for the price of selling an article. "Nonstandard terminology" seems a method for lying via exaggeration. Thanks for the info. Spud. -Original Message- From: Jesse Mazer To: