Science

Out of context: Reply #124

  • Started
  • Last post
  • 1,010 Responses
  • ukit20

    The way I understand it Einstein's theory basically trumps Newton's. So gravity is not actually a "force" that acts directly on objects but the result of the result of mass warping the fabric of space and time. And Einstein's theory has been tested repeatedly over the past century:

    http://online.wsj.com/news/artic…

    Where it breaks down is on the quantum level, where things seem to behave differently. So whoever unifies quantum with Einstein's theory will add a new level of understanding to it like Einstein did.

    • New theories on gravity relate more to electric universe theory,,
      http://www.youtube.c…
      yurimon
    • that's basically how it's understood among the scientific communitymonospaced
    • The crazy thing is that Einstein figured all of this out in an age when people were using typewritersukit2
    • the power of logical mathsmonospaced
    • How is abstract math logical? can there be logic abstraction?yurimon
    • as abstract as it might seem, math is still logical. You only reveal your stupidity askingmonospaced
    • no such thing as a stupid question however logic can be different then abstract thinking.. duh and i is different in most cases duhyurimon
    • you have some logical emotions in there,...yurimon

View thread