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You didn't post an exact quote, but whatever he actually said, what he meant was the speed of light in a vacuum is constant.
originally posted by: Ravenwatcher
Just a thought I don't want to forget..
How exactly do we measure light Speed ?
The 1st Light would have traveled the most distance , What direction do we look for the beginning of the 1st light does it have a forward trajectory or did it just go boom from a center and travel all directions at the same speed . Now what happens to New light doe's it just join the old light and become the same speed ?
Unlike the youtube video commenters who were failed by the educational system, the educational system did not fail you, because this is exactly the kind of question a student of science should ask when watching the Sheldrake video. Good job!
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: crayzeed
Think i seen a similar video or even the same one at some point.
Could that not be down to the progressively more accurate measurements we are able to make as our technology progresses?
The article then goes on to explain how scientists have looked for changes in the constants.
The fundamental laws of physics, as we presently understand them, depend on about 25 parameters, such as Planck's constant h, the gravitational constant G, and the mass and charge of the electron. It is natural to ask whether these parameters are really constants, or whether they vary in space or time.
Most of Sheldrake's ideas are clearly pseudoscientific nonsense. Morphic resonance is extremely vague and ill-defined, and can only really be described as whatever Sheldrake says it is. Crucially, it is not falsifiable, and therefore not testable (although some have tried).
Sheldrake's 2012 book, The Science Delusion, is an anti-scientific rant in which he applies postmodernist hyperscepticism to conventional science, accusing mainstream scientists of adhering to "scientific dogmata", such as the constancy of the speed of light. Ironically, Sheldrake fails to apply any sort of scepticism to his own ideas, which he promotes uncritically, despite there being no evidence for them.
originally posted by: Blueracer
Many years ago a teacher told the class that if the sun went out, we wouldn't know it for 8 minutes. That is how fast it would darken here on earth.