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Path integrals on BBC2

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    #41
    I did my dissertation on QED and Feynmans Sum over Histories stuff..

    Fascinating!

    ALso currently reading Cos's new book - The Quantum Universe: Everything That Can Happen Does Happen

    sometimes I think I understand it and sometimes it is elusive like a mote in the corner of my eye...

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      #42
      It's easier to understand the possible existence of god than some of that stuff.

      Sorry, don't start, just saying like.

      Comment


        #43
        Originally posted by Doggy Styles View Post
        It's easier to understand the possible existence of god than some of that stuff.

        Sorry, don't start, just saying like.
        My A-level physics teacher was a serious christian, and somebody once asked him in class how he could ratify the two. His answer was that the more you go into physics, the more you realise how little we understand about the universe. Which is a fair point, but it's still a bit of a leap from "I don't understand it" to "a magical being must have done it".

        I wish I'd done physics at university, rather than boring old computer science. A friend of mine did physics at Cambridge, and still ended up as a software engineer, so it might not have made a lot of difference to my career.
        Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

        Comment


          #44
          ...guitar solo...

          Originally posted by original PM View Post
          I did my dissertation on QED and Feynmans Sum over Histories stuff..

          Fascinating!

          ALso currently reading Cos's new book - The Quantum Universe: Everything That Can Happen Does Happen

          sometimes I think I understand it and sometimes it is elusive like a mote in the corner of my eye...

          On those occasions, according to Feynmann - you're wrong!

          I liked what someone said on the letters page of New Scientist this week, regarding wave particle duality. An electron is neither a wave nor a particle. It is an electron.
          Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

          Comment


            #45
            Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
            ...guitar solo...



            On those occasions, according to Feynmann - you're wrong!
            I liked what someone said on the letters page of New Scientist this week, regarding wave particle duality. An electron is neither a wave nor a particle. It is an electron.
            Or alterntaively I was right and wrong at the same time

            or I was right until I thought about it and then the wave form collapsed

            Comment


              #46
              Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
              ...guitar solo...



              On those occasions, according to Feynmann - you're wrong!

              I liked what someone said on the letters page of New Scientist this week, regarding wave particle duality. An electron is neither a wave nor a particle. It is an electron.
              I can't remember the term, but Hawking talks about how it's meaningless to talk about what an electron IS, only what models explain it.
              Originally posted by MaryPoppins
              I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
              Originally posted by vetran
              Urine is quite nourishing

              Comment


                #47
                Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
                My A-level physics teacher was a serious christian, and somebody once asked him in class how he could ratify the two. His answer was that the more you go into physics, the more you realise how little we understand about the universe. Which is a fair point, but it's still a bit of a leap from "I don't understand it" to "a magical being must have done it".

                I wish I'd done physics at university, rather than boring old computer science. A friend of mine did physics at Cambridge, and still ended up as a software engineer, so it might not have made a lot of difference to my career.
                I only meant understanding what god is, or would be if he existed. He might be a product of as-yet undiscovered physics.

                It seems the more you know, the less you know. Which might make sense to a quantum physicist.

                Comment

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