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It's more like, why do we see people who don't know much physics think they can do physics? But we don't see many people who don't know surgery think they can do surgery. Say, a man comes along who has no formal training as a surgeon who thinks he has some novel ideas about how to remove your diseased appendix. Are you going to let him operate on you? Or are you going to prefer being operated on by someone who has some knowledge in the field, even if he doesn't know everything and doesn't have all the answers?
originally posted by: crayzeed
a reply to: Arbitrageur
What is really being said there is if you're not a scientist or mathematician keep your nose out.
Tesla made valuable engineering contributions, but when he dabbled in physics he was in some cases wrong and I suspect some people told him so, until later in his life when he was known to be so wrong that people more or less ignored him. For example:
I wonder if they said that to Tesla or Edison and other non scientists or mathematicians.
None of that is even debated, it's accepted fact that electrons exist and play a mojor role in electricity, and the list goes on of other errors by Tesla, where Tesla refused to accept sound theories like Maxwell's theory of electromagnetic radiation, Einstein's theory of relativity, etc. which have huge amounts of experimental evidence to back them up. Tesla was not only told he was wrong but was eventually shown huge amounts of experimental evidence supporting Einstein's and Maxwell's theories. Lots of evidence in support of relativity had already been presented by 1935 when Tesla said relativity was wrong.
Tesla did not agree with the theory of atoms being composed of smaller subatomic particles. He thought that there was no such thing as an electron creating an electric charge and that it had nothing to do with electricity.
However, not only did the electron get discovered but also its properties and effects were measured by physicist J.J. Thomson at the start of the twentieth century. Without electron, technologies like the television couldn't exist.
His frustration with advanced mathematics led him to incorrectly conclude that Maxwell's equations and relativity were wrong.
His denial of modern science left him too far behind his contemporaries – Marconi, Braun, Bose – in his ability to contribute to the wireless communication.
Verification where? I provided links to my sources, where are yours?
Verified descriptions:- Adults, children and animals being taken, verified innumerable times. Besides intensive searches by professionals, beside professional trackers finding no tracks, beside tracker dogs finding no scent, all verified, yet still no person.
Then, verified descriptions of said adults, children and animals being returned to places that they could not possibly be in because Professionals had been there numerous times, that's professionals in their fields just as professional as a scientist or a mathematician.
That's not a link. Parulides when I looked it up is a plural of parulis, which is a synonym for gumboil.
originally posted by: crayzeed
Verification, I said go to Parulides books and videos.
Worse than chasing unicorns, I think Bigelow was deceived by stories of strange happenings at the ranch when in fact the former resident denied them. This is why when Bigelow tried to document strange happenings, he was unable to do so. I don't take any issue with this description of the Skinwalker Ranch fiasco, I think it's probably very close to the truth if not spot on.
A multimillionaire and a government department have spent a huge amount of money and time trying to get to the bottom of this phenomena at the Skinwalker Ranch. But I suppose you would think they were chasing unicorns.
"There are more things in heaven and earth" than scientists and mathematicians know or hopr to know.
Bigelow, John Mack, and Budd Hopkins, all a few french fries short of a happy meal, which is not just my opinion, but it's a widely held view of people who need real verification, not just stories, like skinwalker ranch where they set up a lot of instrumentation to try to verify things and nothing was verified, it's almost the oppsite of verification. I think Bigelow was conned by stories of things that were alleged to have happened in the past, that mostly didn't even happen. That's why he couldn't verify anything (see below).
According to skeptical author Robert Sheaffer, "the 'phenomenon' at Skinwalker is almost certainly illusory. Not only was the yearslong monitoring of 'Skinwalker' by NIDS unable to obtain proof of anything unusual happening, but the people who owned the property prior to the Shermans, a family whose members lived there 60 years, deny that any mysterious 'phenomena' of any kind occurred there". Sheaffer says "the parsimonious explanation is that the supernatural claims about the ranch were made up by the Sherman family prior to selling it to the gullible Bigelow". Sheaffer wrote that many of the more extraordinary claims originated solely from Terry Sherman, who worked as a caretaker after the ranch was sold to Bigelow.[10]
In 1996, skeptic James Randi awarded Bigelow a Pigasus Award for funding the purchase of the ranch and for supporting John E. Mack's and Budd Hopkins' investigations. The award category designated Bigelow as "the funding organization that supported the most useless study of a supernatural, paranormal or occult".
James Carrion (pictured), then International Director of MUFON tendered his resignation in January of 2010. He was unhappy at the way things had transpired and felt that MUFON had been manipulated by Bigelow. Carrion sent an email to his fellow MUFON board members...
"...Through Dr. Salisbury, we were able to interview the brother of the original owner of the ranch who sold it to the Shermans who subsequently sold it to Bigelow. The ranch owner’s brother was adamant that there was no UFO or strange activity on the ranch prior to the Sherman’s purchase, contrary to what was discussed in the Skinwalker Book and that he (the owner’s brother) had personally received a call from Bigelow trying to convince him otherwise. I found this to be extremely odd and disturbing..."
● Bigelow bought Skinwalker Ranch in 1996 from the Sherman Family. Despite the stories you’ve heard. Nothing much extraordinary happened there whilst the Myers family inhabited the ranch for the majority of the 20th century.
● BAASS security guards at Skinwalker Ranch have claimed [and proved] they had to submit to MRI scans and provide urine samples, as part of their terms of employment. Bigelow’s study group, NIDS, found no hard evidence of paranormal activity.
That's probably true in the heavens, aka the cosmos, but I see no evidence that such a statement applies to skinwalker ranch, where it would be more appropriate to insert a quote dealing with human psychology, gullibility, naivete, greed, storytelling, disinformation, and the lack of anything verifiable. Maybe a few people were primed to see illusions, and thus saw illusions consistent with known psychological science, but independent scientific instruments like cameras failed to provide any scientific evidence, as far as I can tell. There are answers for such events in psychology, where people see things that a camera doesnt, without having to resort to "paranormal".
"There are more things in heaven and earth" than scientists and mathematicians know or hopr to know.
originally posted by: charlyv
But in this context, there are two outcomes - one where the cat lives, one where the cat dies. The idea is that when we observe a wave or particle the wave function collapses. In the end, you would observe one of two outcomes (not both).
In universe 1 - the cat lives
In universe 2 - the cat dies
No, the Shrodinger equation says the cat is BOTH dead and alive.
originally posted by: Lumenari
originally posted by: charlyv
But in this context, there are two outcomes - one where the cat lives, one where the cat dies. The idea is that when we observe a wave or particle the wave function collapses. In the end, you would observe one of two outcomes (not both).
In universe 1 - the cat lives
In universe 2 - the cat dies
He was referring to the MWI (Many Worlds Interpretation) posed by Everett later on. In the MWI, in one universe the cat is dead, in the other it is alive.
The entire post is a thought exercise on the MWI theory to explain paranormal experiences.
Which has both its merits and problems... I have argued both sides of the theory before.
S&F for the OP BlasteR, BTW...