Science
- Started
- Last post
- 1,010 Responses
- son0
- what does japan have to do with you hating jews?scarabin
- you mentioned the symbol like it was evil incarnate...i don't hate anyone...son
- no, just the idea of genocide. i don't see how you missed that in my postscarabin
- buuuuut...i researched that genocide...and i saw the same people on both sides its like chiraqson
- yet chiraq has outside hands...metaphysical... everything does so who cares riigghht?son
- what does that have to do with you posting about hating jews?scarabin
- didn't post anything about hating jews...Michael Bradley was speaking about all white people him being 1son
- no, he wasn't. he was not talking about rallying up a force against himself.scarabin
- well...i listened to him on yt and he is a white man that speaks of himself having issues - so bad he hung up the phone lolson
- son, heres a little lesson, the nazi swastika is flipped, they are so far from the same they are in fact the oppositemoldero
- of course he has issues, son. he's writing about hating jewsscarabin
- monospaced0
- You're a funny fucker.Morning_star
- Are you a robot without a soul?yurimon
- Not me.Morning_star
- Yes, you are, actually.monospaced
- arrogant bellendfadein11
- hahaha, yeah, just insult, real upstanding, but entirely expected from a thread non-contributormonospaced
- son0
The swastika is a symbol used by of one of the most hated men on Earth, a symbol that represents the slaughter of millions of people and one of the most destructive wars on Earth. But Adolf Hitler was not the first to use this symbol. In fact, it was used as a powerful symbol thousands of years before him, across many cultures and continents.
For the Hindus and Buddhists in India and other Asian countries, the swastika was an important symbol for many thousands of years and, to this day, the symbol can still be seen in abundance - on temples, buses, taxis, and on the cover of books. It was also used in Ancient Greece and can be found in the remains of the ancient city of Troy, which existed 4,000 years ago. The ancient Druids and the Celts also used the symbol, reflected in many artefacts that have been discovered. It was used by Nordic tribes and even early Christians used the Swastika as one of their symbols, including the Teutonic Knights, a German medieval military order, which became a purely religious Catholic Order. But why is this symbol so important and why did Adolf Hitler decide to use it?
- oh no...look at that evil fire and evil electric and evil gun...lolson
- you hate jews, it's okay. we get it. it's one of the least alarming things about youscarabin
- this isn't about the swastika, it's about you posting an anti-semitic text as your worldviewscarabin
- nothing i posted was anti semetic...you can take it out of context if you want...is theosophy anti semetic?son
- you didn't even read the text you posted. it contains all the context needed.scarabin
- is theosophy anti-semetic?son
- the bit you posted was, yeah.scarabin
- that's a funny little attempt to derail, though. cutescarabin
- Son is right, The swastika originally a religious symbol. nothing to do with Nazis till hitler decided to invert it.yurimon
- everyone knows that already, yuri. the swastika isn't the point. the actual content of his post wasscarabin
- do you have pom poms to go with that cheerleader outfit, yuri? do you even know what game we're playing?scarabin
- lol...the bit of theosophy i posted was anti-semetic...aaaaa... so now theosophy is self hateson
- hey, you posted it, not me. maybe research what you represent as your worldviewscarabin
- i don't remember posting any "theosophy" so...i was just asking but i dunno, he saw derailing...son
- lord forgive me for projecting and derailingson
- instead of just pasting whatever's on the angry black guy blogs at the time and hoping it's reliablescarabin
- actually its from the aussies http://www.ancient-o… maybe it was aboriginals...damn them!!!!son
- stop playin games sarbyurimon
- get back under the porch before the neighbors see you, yuriscarabin
- chill scrabroyurimon
- SCIENCE!!pango
- lol @ scarabin, fighting the good fight against the whackadoodle nutjobsmonospaced
- monospaced0
^ First, that is just a blog post of the 3rd publication or an experiment that AT BEST, is "consistent" with one approach/interpretation.
I quote them directly, "Note that consistency doesn't necessarily mean that von Neumann's approach is the only valid interpretation."
While it might be peer-reviewed and scientific, it's not conclusive by any stretch of the definition, and certainly would never, ever in any reality be used to support the claim that science is a belief system.
- i_monk0
India reaches Mars orbit:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technolog…
- i_monk1
This is a great channel.
- monospaced0
Also, the "peer reviewed" paper is by a guy who's a "scientist" at the Noetic Institute. That institute is, by definition, fringe science and is certainly not taken very seriously by peers in the field. Just sayin, since you thought you actually found something.
- The institute is on the Quackwatch list of questionable organisations.monospaced
- http://en.wikipedia.…monospaced
- if only you put that much effort in making apple a better brand..
//sGeorgesIV - hahahamonospaced
- Head of the Parapsychological Organization
http://archived.para…ukit2 - He's like one of the Ghostbustersukit2
- teh0
Since we are on the subject of solar.
- any movement on this?BrokenHD
- yeah rightmoldero
- moose powered roadwayssarahfailin
- son0
Diamond Window
Beyond his work on the bomb, Quarterman worked with fluoride solutions to create new chemical compounds and new molecules. He was skilled at purifying hydrogen fluoride, a highly corrosive gas. In 1967 he developed a corrosive resistant “window” made of diamonds in order to better study hydrogen fluoride. His innovation was called the “diamond window.” He also created a xenon compound which surprised the world of chemistry because it was believed that xenon was an “inert” gas and supposedly could not be combined with other atoms. At the time of his death, in 1982, Quarterman had initiated work on a project to develop “synthetic blood” but encountered ethical and political opposition to his research.
- Sweet. Mexican scientist!cannonball1978
- yeah...a mexican named Lloydson
- Morning_star0
Ray Hyman - is a Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Oregon in Eugene, Oregon,[1] and a noted critic of parapsychology. Hyman along with James Randi, Martin Gardner and Paul Kurtz is one of the founders of the modern skeptical movement. He is the founder and leader of the Skeptic's Toolbox. Hyman serves on the Executive Council for the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry."
So, no agenda there then.
Utts response to Rayman
http://www.ics.uci.edu/~jutts/re…- you used him to support a comment on the previous page. So now he perspective doesn't work for you?Gnash
- *hisGnash
- Hyman was talking about the Randi prize and it being unscientific. Randi and Hyman are friends and colleagues. My point was that Hymans opinion should be doubly valid when talking about Randi because they're on the same 'side'.Morning_star
- point was that Hymans opinion should be doubly valid when talking about the Randi Prize because they're on the same 'side'.Morning_star
- 'side'. If you would like another critic of Randi i'd be please to post a few links. However, Hyman has a clear skeptical agenda.Morning_star
- agenda.Morning_star
- detritus2
This is so cool to me - Australia's inland plam trees were likely brought to the continent by aboriginal travellers 30,000 years ago...
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-…
...and, what's more, 'evidence' of this was apparently transmitted through their oral traditions.
- ukit20
Faster, smaller, greener computers, capable of processing information up to 1,000 times faster than currently available models, could be made possible by replacing silicon with materials that can switch back and forth between different electrical states.
The present size and speed limitations of computer processors and memory could be overcome by replacing silicon with 'phase-change materials' (PCMs), which are capable of reversibly switching between two structural phases with different electrical states -- one crystalline and conducting and the other glassy and insulating -- in billionths of a second.
In these new devices, logic operations and memory are co-located, rather than separated, as they are in silicon-based computers. These materials could eventually enable processing speeds between 500 and 1,000 times faster than the current average laptop computer, while using less energy.