I thought the article might relieve your boredom with being always right..... I guess I failed….. However, it might be futile to “try again” given how you know it all already.
That is my point -- you keep insisting that I should "read a book" or whatever, without ever considering that I am well educated regarding exactly what human science knows about the neuron.
I have no doubt that if you started scanning the internet right now you would come up with facts that I am not familiar with -- I certainly don't know everything. However I seriously doubt that
you are currently familiar with any facts that I am not
also currently familiar with.
So can you just drop the pretense, and stop using some kind of argument from "more educated authority" in place of actually addressing the issues? Maybe stop the sarcasm, and just address the issues?
So because I know that an internal combustion engine (ICE) functions differently from a jet engine (JE) I am not allowed to use any argument for how it burns gasoline differently to produce power? After all an ICE also burns gasoline to produce power....so by your argument I cannot discuss how a JE does that differently because the ICE does it too.
But they don't burn gasoline differently!!
Gasoline burns the same when it burns regardless of where it burns. The chemical reaction is the same.
And the fact is, the same principle is at work in both an ICE and a JE -- expanding gases from that chemical reaction of combustion are used somehow for mechanical energy.
In fact one could say that you could devise many types of "engines" that use the same principle, in fact we have -- things like rotary engines, turbine engines, turboprop engines, rocket engines, you name it.
If the important thing an engine does is "propel," then it is inaccurate to suggest that the way an ICE "uses" the expanding gases is somehow "uniquely essential" to what is going on, given that we know of so many other ways an engine can make use of expanding gasses to propel whatever it powers.
Furthermore, it is obvious that you don't even need gasoline -- anything that expands rapidly will work. There are steam engines and even things like this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Orion_(nuclear_propulsion)
.... all of which make use of the same principle.