Posts Tagged ‘Science’
The Periodic Cycle of Construction – Destruction
March 29th, 2007 / Old Blogs / 3 Comments »
There are certain phenomena about which there is no doubt as to their existence, yet they are hardly understood by man. This is summarized in the epic struggle of chemists to place elements in a periodic table, with properties being governed by relative location. The fact I wish to emphasize is, there was knowledge that [...]
Much Debated, Edited and Hardly Understood
February 11th, 2007 / Old Blogs / 18 Comments »
You know what, I’ve been looking at the discovery channel and national geographic for quite some time, and believe that these folks are quite stupid. If only they would observe each others’ programmes, they would uncover something remarkable.
Something I will write in this post. It is not about putting Darwinism down, it is about looking [...]
Why Light Has Mass – And Why It Doesn’t
September 14th, 2006 / Old Blogs / 11 Comments »
Something we know for certain about light is that it is an electromagnetic wave. Another reasonable assumption, corroborated by experimental results, is that this wave has a dual nature – it behaves as a particle wave under some circumstances, and as an energy (or pure) wave under others. The adoption of the dual theory resulted [...]
Time Travel – Possible, but How?
September 10th, 2006 / Old Blogs / 1 Comment »
Caution: Long post below. Read only in the presence of ample time.
It is relatively more difficult to prove that time travel is not possible than to prove that it is possible. Before I move on to the idea of How, I will try to prove the possibility of the radical concept of twisting our fourth [...]
Point & Click – Literally
September 7th, 2006 / Uncategorized / No Comments »
How many times have you wished to turn on/off the lights without moving a muscle? Many, I’m sure. Of course, it is absolutely impossible to do it without moving at least one muscle somewhere in your body (besides, muscles like those in the heart are always moving), but it can be made far easier than [...]