klypp wrote:Validity... As in well grounded?
Then there is no validity.
The video is about the Copenhagen interpretation in quantum physics. It only shows that if your fundamental ideas are wrong, you end up in mysticism.
Jarvamundo wrote:klypp wrote:Validity... As in well grounded?
Then there is no validity.
The video is about the Copenhagen interpretation in quantum physics. It only shows that if your fundamental ideas are wrong, you end up in mysticism.
right on
Why God Doesn't Exist 23: The Slit Experiment
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOwTV-HgDUo
jjohnson wrote:This ought to be on the Miles Mathis page, but since it is a direct answer, let me urge you to read Miles's paper on the double slit experiment. I am not saying he is right, but I am saying you will probably find his explanation interesting. What I found most interesting was his idea of also mounting sensors on a wall where the photon source was located and making the side of the barrier with the slits in it reflecting, as in its being a mirror. I do not think that has been tried yet, anywhere in the extant literature that I've found, anyway. Incidentally, Miles doesn't say it, but the mirrored surface should be a front-surface mirror, not a mirror backing behind plastic or glass.
http://milesmathis.com/updates.html
With the transistor, the laser is one of the most important inventions of the twentieth century. Designed into every CD player and long distance telephone connection, lasers today are manufactured by the billions. At the heart of laser action is perfect alignment of the crests and troughs of myriad waves of light. Their location and momentum must be theoretically knowable. But this violates the holiest canon of Copenhagen theory: Heisenberg Uncertainty. Bohr and Von Neumann proved to be true believers in Heisenberg's rule. Both denied that the laser was possible.
The most famous of those experiments involved a "single" photon that somehow succeeded in going through two holes at once.
That uses a point-particle model for the "photon"--a little bullet carrying energy. If you define the problem this way, of course, you get nonsense. Garbage in, garbage out.
klypp wrote:While Miles Mathis and Bill Gaede are both interesting and humorous, this might be a good time to cool it a little... So maybe I should provide a link to Carver Mead's famous Spectator interview back in 2001. Here he describes in simple terms what went wrong in quantum physics. And he has some important things to say about light and modern technology. Like:With the transistor, the laser is one of the most important inventions of the twentieth century. Designed into every CD player and long distance telephone connection, lasers today are manufactured by the billions. At the heart of laser action is perfect alignment of the crests and troughs of myriad waves of light. Their location and momentum must be theoretically knowable. But this violates the holiest canon of Copenhagen theory: Heisenberg Uncertainty. Bohr and Von Neumann proved to be true believers in Heisenberg's rule. Both denied that the laser was possible.
Light is all about waves. Modern technology demonstrates this.
Miles Mathis seems to be stuck with the particle photon theory. If so, I'm afraid his experiment will fail for some of the same reasons that turned quantum theory into mysticism. Carver Mead:The most famous of those experiments involved a "single" photon that somehow succeeded in going through two holes at once.
That uses a point-particle model for the "photon"--a little bullet carrying energy. If you define the problem this way, of course, you get nonsense. Garbage in, garbage out.
Bill Gaede is even worse out with his rope theory. Among other things, he bases this on the obviously wrong idea that “light always travels at the same speed irrespective of medium”.
If this was true, neither GPS nor a lot of radar systems would work. Just to begin with...
If you believe him, don't ever step into a modern aircraft anymore!
Seems like the same story over and over again. The guys that come up with revolutionary new ideas about light, are still hanging around Thomas Young trying to figure out what a candle light does to a slit.
Man, that was more than two hundred years ago!
the Lorentz factor is actually a natural logical consequence of the rope hypothesis.
The rope is the structure that most easily replicates the transverse nature of light while also accomodating the longitudinal nature of atomic motion. You can't get transverse behavior in an "infinite continuous aether"
klypp wrote:The observed speed of light is the observed speed of light no matter what causes this speed. Changing the name to “bulk observed speed” and saying it “may appear” is just nonsense.
The speed of light in a medium is what we measure it to be.
klypp wrote:the Lorentz factor is actually a natural logical consequence of the rope hypothesis.
Holy shit!
I was under the impression that Gaede would have nothing to do with relativists. Wasn't this the guy that said “Relativists just go around and around in circles”?
The Lorentz factor is about time dilation and length contraction, and if his rope theory proves this, then Gaede is right up on the carousel with the rest of the gang.
klypp wrote:The rope is the structure that most easily replicates the transverse nature of light while also accomodating the longitudinal nature of atomic motion. You can't get transverse behavior in an "infinite continuous aether"
I see now that this discussion is not about the wave nature of light, but rather about what the “aether” looks like.
In which case I have no strong views, except this: The aether must be shown to exist by other means than just postulating that any wave need to have something to wave. Until then, the idea that light is its own medium is as good as any idea.
klypp wrote:Until then, the idea that light is its own medium is as good as any idea
Oh well... Some truisms are better than others. This one is simply too good to be true!The reason that light travels the same speed irrespective of the medium is that there is only one medium
The first sentence says that the frequency is constant. The second says that the speed is constant. You are just mixing things up. And neither of these postulates are likely to be true.If we could shrink down to the size of an atom and watch the aether itself undulate we would observe that it is always constant. The speed of light between any two atoms is always the same.
An earthquake produces both transverse and longitudinal waves propagating through the ground, in addition to the surface waves produced. You will also find both transverse and longitudinal waves beneath the surface in water. You are just making up "facts" in order to save your theory.You can't get transverse behavior in an "infinite continuous aether". Transverse behavior only arises at the boundary of an object, for instance ocean waves.
At first I thought this was a typo. But then I realized it's just as misunderstood as the rest. The wavelength is longer if the source moves away from us. If it moves towards us, the wavelength is shorter. The Doppler effect was explained more than 150 years ago. To you this is a mystery because you got it all wrong to begin with.We have to explain why the wavelength of light from a moving source is longer than from a stationary one. It is perfectly reasonable to venture an explanation for this empirical observation.
This is not "time dilation", it's a velocity-dependent redshift, no less a logical consequence of the particular natures of light than is the standard doppler effect. Nobody ever called the standard doppler effect some kind of anisotropic "time dilation".
The Lorentz factor, the Lorentz gamma factor, the gamma factor - they are all aliases. We are still talking length contraction and time dilation here. You didn't like to be associated with that and solved the problem by changing the name. Not very smart. We all know how to google.It turns out that the superposition of a transverse wave undulating at a constant speed superimposed on a longitudinal wave moving at v will slow the propagation of the transverse wave by the factor gamma. Therefore an atom will re-emit light at a rate that is slower by a factor of gamma.
Light is all about waves. Modern technology demonstrates this.
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