I came to see the retards being fed.Why are you still here, arfa? Why hasn't the sheer uselessness driven you away? Don't you have anything better to do?
I came to see the retards being fed.
So you find this place entertaining enough to devote some of your time and attention to it. Stop complaining, then. Nobody is forcing you to be here. Your choices are your own.I came to see the retards being fed.
Yes they are. You could always display some of that infantile behaviour of yours and "just ban me".So you find this place entertaining enough to devote some of your time and attention to it. Stop complaining, then. Nobody is forcing you to be here. Your choices are your own.
I will be interested to see whether Arfa returns to the .net site, now that his suspension for incivility is about to expire. And if he does return there (under his nom de plume "SuperSlim") , how long he lasts.......
We agree, then. Stop whining about being here.Yes they are.
Are you planning a grand stomping exit? I'd say we're about due for someone to do that, based on the average time between these events.You could always display some of that infantile behaviour of yours and "just ban me".
I'm supposed to take that advice from you? Heh.James. You should try growing up a bit.
Yeah. Heh.I'm supposed to take that advice from you? Heh.
I'd have to start believing, first.My other hint to you is, stop believing your own ideas are all good.
Oh, but I do know all the answers to all the questions, arfa! I truly believe that.*Or that you, unique among humans knows all the answers to all the questions.
Well, not so open that my brains fall out. Open about the right things, let's say. Hopefully.You also believe you have an open mind. You even say that.
I think you missed a subtle distinction somewhere up above. Oh well, never mind.But you also say that your mind has thoughts, and you claim they aren't physical.
Sorry to break it to you, but I actually did a reasonable job of it. Go back and check again.You can't explain that in a concrete way.
Interesting notion. When did not believing weird things become a qualification for being allowed to moderate an internet discussion forum? Maybe I missed the memo.You're a special kind of idiot. You shouldn't be a moderator because you believe things that are just weird.
Well, here's the thing, arfa brane. I'd be willing to wager that I've read more on the topic of information science than 99% of all the other people in the world. Maybe you're right that I have nothing useful to contribute to that particular field. But then again, you're not exactly pumping out the research publications in that area either, are you?You have practically nothing useful to contribute to information science, you don't even know what information is, for instance.
I'm not stuck with anything. Open mind, see. All you have to do is to convince me to change my mind!You're stuck with an idea that energy is just a number, you can't explain why an "energy number" has physical units.
But James, why is it defined that way?All you have to do is to convince me to change my mind!
As for the explanation, it's simple: energy is defined in such a way that it has certain physical units (or, more properly, dimensions). Energy is a concept, invented and defined by human beings, measured using numbers.
It's completely arbitrary to define it that way. What you ought to be asking is: why is it useful to define it that way? The answer to that question leads us to the important finding that if we define it in a particular way it is a conserved quantity in many situations, which is very useful indeed.But James, why is it defined that way?
Because of how it is defined, of course!Why does it have the units it does?
You'd have to ask him, I suppose (except you can't, because he's no longer with us).Why does Feynman, in that lecture which is so great a reference for you, use physical blocks, children's playthings, in his discourse, which is patently an analogy?
He says quite a bit about energy, I'm sure. Why don't you tell me what you think is important and why, instead of trying to drop obscure hints about what you might want to say?What else does he say about energy and why does he say it?
I think the point of Feynman's physics lectures was to teach physics. Do you find that confusing?What is his point, really if all we need to understand what it is, is counting some children's blocks?
No. We count the blocks and keep them. Elastic stuff can't count (well, not unless it is in the appropriate configuration to make a conscious being etc. etc.).As for elastic stuff, Feynman includes that in his lectures too, elastic stuff is able to store energy. Elastic stuff counts some blocks up and keeps them!
I disagree. There isn't anything arbitrary about a Hamiltonian, or a Lagrangian.It's completely arbitrary to define it that way.
Actually that is what I was asking, without saying it explicitly. It isn't given the physical units it has for arbitrary reasons, nor because it's useful, nor because it's conserved. Do you also agree with the notion that information is conserved--even "lost" information isn't really lost?What you ought to be asking is: why is it useful to define it that way?
He talks about the difference in a relaxed or in a stretched elastic band, in terms of intermolecular interactions. As you may know, a stretched elastic band has more energy than a relaxed one, it warms up too. Heat is a form of energy; so are a few other things. But you have already disagreed with me on that and so has exchemist.He says quite a bit about energy, I'm sure.
Hamiltonians and Lagrangians are defined with reference to a pre-existing definition of work (energy), which leads to a derivation of ideas such as kinetic energy and potential energy. So, not arbitrary, but derivative of an arbitrary definition - albeit an incredibly useful one.I disagree. There isn't anything arbitrary about a Hamiltonian, or a Lagrangian.
I'm sure that at some stage in the future you'll tell us all the secret about why it is given the physical units it has. When will you do that, exactly?Actually that is what I was asking, without saying it explicitly. It isn't given the physical units it has for arbitrary reasons, nor because it's useful, nor because it's conserved.
Without context, it's very difficult to agree to such a general statement. What information? What system are you talking about? How are you defining/measuring the information?Do you also agree with the notion that information is conserved--even "lost" information isn't really lost?
I agree that heat is a form of energy. Which makes heat just another number, by the way.He talks about the difference in a relaxed or in a stretched elastic band, in terms of intermolecular interactions. As you may know, a stretched elastic band has more energy than a relaxed one, it warms up too. Heat is a form of energy; so are a few other things. But you have already disagreed with me on that and so has exchemist.
That's because you stopped listening and thinking about what I've told you a long time ago in this conversation. You just decided that I must be an idiot, when the truth is that I have a much better grasp on all this stuff than you do. Your mistake is in assuming you have to be the smartest person in the room. It doesn't always work that way, arfa.Which I put down to you not knowing what you're talking about.
Remember that it was you who started (and have continued) with the personal insult bullshit. I have no problem dismissing an arrogant person who is both wrong and needlessly uncivil; that's what you deserve. You're lucky to get any of my attention at this point. Most people would probably have written you off long ago.It's why you and he get so uselessly dismissive and patronising.
Most people would probably have written you off long ago.