Applying math to infinity is something I'm not very interested on because math is quite limited, infinity isn't.Glarundis wrote:but you didn't say anything about the rest of my post! :(
bad, bad monad!
I'm not a pro-science, I'm more like open minded to everything possible, not just those what science can proove or cannot proove. But you need to keep in mind that science is not a definition of truth, science is more like a method to organize the knowledge which we have at that point into most reliable source of information. Scientific "truth" can and have many times changed for that reason, because we learn more and more of the universe and world everyday. But at least science relies on knowledge based on testing and prooving, even it can change but it's aimed to get better all the time with more and more gathering of solid proof, whereas religion relies on a story written on paper. ;)Glarundis wrote:i'm not saying there isn't a way around it and it would be possible, but science doesn't know for sure what they say they know, let alone the things they say it's only an hypothesis.
look at this boson of higgs thing.
they can't see it or prove it (yet) but they have claimed it exists for many years now. the thing is, that particle needs to exist to make sense of all their way of thinking for the past decades. they just say they know it exists but can't prove it lol. and then people accuse religious people :D
What comes to the Higgs boson, it most certainly is already found about a month ago: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgs_boso ... _new_boson
What is time? I'd say time is highly relative and depending on the observer, time is not absolute.Glarundis wrote:to me, no matter what, there can't be time shifting. nothing bends time, time is subject to nothing. in every function, time is what goes on independently of everything else, and everything else develops on time.
time is always on the x axis (abscissa). is there any function at all, anything where time is on the y axis? afaik, there is not.
and the whole "time travel if you can achieve speeds higher than the speed of light" doesn't mean you can time travel. it only means that you see a particle somewhere but when you see it, the particle already passed by that point. in terms of human senses, you'd feel a particle arriving at you before you could see it or hear it. that would be strange, but it's not time travel!
i'm liking this discussion, physics is very interesting, too bad i won't be here for the next 4 days or so.
can you just say something about the rest of my post?i think the 1/infinite thing makes sense on what i said
"Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour. Sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute. THAT'S relativity." - A. Einstein.
Now you could say that "Meh, even if it feels like different time you still age the same depending how it feels like". But that's not true either, which have been proven false by the gravitational time dilation. "A case of time dilation in action is that astronauts actually return from their missions on the international space station (ISS) having aged less than the mission control crew that stayed on earth. Such time dilation has been repeatedly demonstrated, for instance by small disparities in atomic clocks on earth and in space, even though both clocks work perfectly (it is not a mechanical malfunction). The laws of nature are such that time itself (i.e. spacetime) will bend due to differences in either gravity or velocity - each of which affects time in different ways."
So if the gravity which we have on earth can bend time, I'd say it's not just possible but highly likely that the black hole or warm hole, which power is vastly greater than any other power in universe, could bend time aswell in a way we can't even think of.