I'm pretty sure all the "crackpots" who turned out to be right are an inspiration to those seeking to become one of those crackpots who turn out to be right.
History is full of crackpots, but mostly the ones who ended up changing physics. Nobody writes much about the ones who were wrong.
Why?
Hello and welcome.
In general evidence is required for an opinion. "That which is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence".
Sorry, I don't understand. The existence of what is probable?
Most people here are reluctant to look at videos without some clue as to what the video contains.
My initial impression of the video is that the speaker is not distinguishing between "it's currently impossible" (meaning "I see no way of doing it with existing technology") and "it's theoretically impossible" (meaning "the laws of physics forbid it").
Depends on definitions, as some plausibly claim Voyager now meets their criteria. I disagree, but understand their position and consider it defensible.Interstellar spaceships are currently impossible
I assume the claim of theoretical impossibility is based on standard interpretation of GR, yes?...faster-than-light interstellar spaceships, however, are theoretically impossible so we can't reasonably hope for those.
Physics has progressed far more in the last century than it has in the rest of human history, and there are far fewer anomalies now than there have been at any time in the past.
This is what every society has believed, as wonderfully explained by James Burke in "The Day the Universe Changed". The fact that some of us believe this, does not appear to bear on whether an increasing body of anomalies (in the Kuhnian sense) has accumulated since Einstein.We've discovered the fundamental building blocks of the universe and (mostly) how they interact...
100% agreement on all these....we've put men on the Moon and probes on other planets and (maybe) outside the solar system, we can predict the motion of stars and planets with greater accuracy than anyone could previously have dreamed about, and we're communicating right now using methods entirely dependent on a detailed understanding of both relativity and quantum mechanics.
Do you consider my position based on this? I'm merely relaying the top expert studies on the topic for the past 50 years from Thomas Kuhn to The Quantum Universe Committee, and similar, even more recent work.Yet somehow quite a few people manage to get the idea that because we haven't quite worked out all the details of how things behave at a scale that people a couple of centuries ago couldn't even have conceived of, that this means physics must be in a terrible state and in need of fixing at the most fundamental level.
In project management, it is the lack of progress that we most focus on as a risk indicator because that's our job to address. I do have a perceptual bias in that my perspective is skewed to successful delivery of information systems, and I therefore focus on what is most likely to put that success in jeopardy. An overview of the reasoning used begins by referencing the high level govt report describing "9 major, long term mysteries" can be viewed at youtube dot com/watch?v=ILweWfuBreA.Why is there so much crackpot physics? Because some people are apparently capable of living in the most advanced and fastest advancing period in human history, and somehow seeing only a lack of progress.
Anything at all. There's a difference between "X is impossible with current technology" and "X is theoretically impossible" no matter what X is.What do you mean by "it"?
Voyager occured to me when I made that comment but I trusted that you would understand what I meant.Depends on definitions, as some plausibly claim Voyager now meets their criteria. I disagree, but understand their position and consider it defensible.
It's based on the proven fact that the relative velocity of two objects with non-zero rest mass travelling within our four dimensional spacetime universe cannot be greater than c.I assume the claim of theoretical impossibility is based on standard interpretation of GR, yes?
The laws governing the relative velocities of physical objects are neither unreliable nor widely acknowledged as needing revolutionary change; they have been confirmed by observations.Unless / until we can provide reliable (i.e.: paradox & fallacy free) explanation of space and time relative to observations, I tend to think claims 'we cannot reasonably hope for X' due to our interpretation of "laws" widely acknowledged as needing revolutionary change seem unreliable, but I would greatly appreciate evidence my perception of error is mistaken.
Perspective seems to be everything on this. If we look from a perspective of mass, observations of dark matter suggest 90% of the material universe is anomalous. Please provide an instance in history when anything like this has ever been true?
Perspective seems to be everything on this. If we look from a perspective of mass, observations of dark matter suggest 90% of the material universe is anomalous. Please provide an instance in history when anything like this has ever been true?
This is what every society has believed, as wonderfully explained by James Burke in "The Day the Universe Changed".
The fact that some of us believe this, does not appear to bear on whether an increasing body of anomalies (in the Kuhnian sense) has accumulated since Einstein.
Do you consider my position based on this?
I'm merely relaying the top expert studies
In project management, it is the lack of progress that we most focus on as a risk indicator because that's our job to address.
Does this make the FTL research suggestion seem more sensible?
We agree on this. The claim such a difference exists is true. In the video, Neyland and I are making truth claims about logical statements, so we should be clear we're not talking about FTL possibility, we're talking about whether (given an assumption it will be theoretically possible in the future), there exist rationally identifiable options to pursue.Anything at all. There's a difference between "X is impossible with current technology" and "X is theoretically impossible" no matter what X is.
True, based on our current theory, but theories have changed. If we define theory as what we believe are the laws of nature at a given time, and the laws of nature do not allow something, then most experts tend to say it is impossible. This is what happened to the first radio experiments by Hughes, who really discovered radio waves, but since the paradigm of the day didn't allow it, wireless waves were explained away as induction when he tried to call experts' attention to it, perhaps setting research back 20 years and Marconi got all the credit.For example mobile phones were never theoretically impossible.
True, but I don't believe most historians of science claim revolutions contradict laws, rather that they radically change interpretations of evidence. Continental drift didn't contradict laws of geology, it did replace assumptions on which the cognitive framework of geology was based, however.The technology to make them wasn't available in Maxwell's day, but they don't contradict any of the laws he discovered
Of course, but in the starship community, this distinction is "a thing" often brought up.Voyager occured to me when I made that comment but I trusted that you would understand what I meant.
So long as four dimensional space-time is a fundamentally accurate description of our universe, that reasoning appears rock solid....relative velocity of two objects with non-zero rest mass travelling within our four dimensional spacetime universe cannot be greater than c.
Other than the lunatic fringe, I think everyone is in absolute agreement on that! I would add my conclusion as an information systems developer something I cannot prove, but believe: new math tools are probably needed. Happy to share my reasoning on that if you're interested.Science fiction writers usually get around this by postulating some kind of warp drive that would enable a spaceship to leave the universe in one place and return to it in another after travelling through higher dimensions/wormholes or some such. Such possibilties cannot be ruled out, but they would require new physics as well as new technology.
I agree 100% with this statement, with a minor clarification that it's not really the laws that change in revolutions, its more the way they are interpreted and how they are categorized.The laws governing the relative velocities of physical objects are neither unreliable nor widely acknowledged as needing revolutionary change; they have been confirmed by observations.
I do not understand this: revolutionary change of paradigm has always been prompted by evidence, never by a desire for new technology. You seem to nourish a wish for FTL that causes you to think that the laws of nature will oblige you. But there really is no evidence that this will happen.I would also agree that the need for revolutionary change of paradigm is not widely acknowledged, but believe the reason for this is not because the need does not exist, but rather because experts in this sub-specialty, of history and philosophy of scientific revolutions are a tiny faction outside traditional science department, (Humanities) and they publish results to other philosophers of science, rather than the physics community.
Of course I believe physics as a whole is progressing, but I do agree with Penrose, Smolin, and various groups that in critical areas, the progress has been purchased at the cost of good science, especially when "reality" is rejected at quantum scales, because science rests on this assumption....Are you seriously trying to suggest that the fact we've now learned this shows that we are not progressing? ..we now know more than they did...we know more now than we used to...etc.
Defining terms is a best practice, one I appreciate and am grateful you do as well.Perhaps it would help if you define what you actually mean by "anomaly" and "progress". Because so far the only evidence you've provided is that we know more than we used to, but still not everything. If you don't think increasing our body of knowledge is progress, I'm afraid we may not be speaking the same language.
These sources I consider reliable:Good for you. In science, it is the evidence that we focus on. Do you have any to support your claims about a lack of progress?
What makes scientific claims seem sensible is evidence. No amount of waffle can substitute for that.[/I welcome and am grateful for the help you and others are willing to provide to help me identify any waffling you catch.
Edit: And if you're here to tout your own claims rather than discuss the topic of this thread, perhaps you should create your own thread rather than derailing this one.
My goal in being here is to learn. I wanted to find skeptics with more experience than I in identifying and discussing crackpot physics because this is a problem for those of us in the starship community who want to do good, reliable work and avoid doing crackpot physics.
If I can learn why my claims do or do not qualify as crackpot physics, I can either present my ideas better, or go back to skiing and making buttloads of money financially enslaving the population for credit card companies.![]()
I think this is a false dichotomy. Heliocentrism was started by the Pope wanting a better calendar (technology), but the Copernican Revolution was not really complete until lots of supporting observational evidence accrued.I do not understand this: revolutionary change of paradigm has always been prompted by evidence, never by a desire for new technology.
This is true.You seem to nourish a wish for FTL
This seems significantly different than my stated position that we may profitably assume the laws of nature allow future development of FTL....that causes you to think that the laws of nature will oblige you.
True, but there is evidence that making plausible assumptions about what nature's laws might allow can be extremely helpful to research. An example used to illustrate this in philosophy of science is Newton's law of gravity, which was postulated rather than derivation from known processes, and was contrary to the laws prohibiting action at a distance. Much of that law seems to have survived, earlier preserved with concepts like the aether, now replaced by local reference frames dragging EM fields in GR, gravitons, photons & the like.But there really is no evidence that this will happen.
Of course I believe physics as a whole is progressing, but I do agree with Penrose, Smolin, and various groups that in critical areas, the progress has been purchased at the cost of good science, especially when "reality" is rejected at quantum scales, because science rests on this assumption.
I took the quote from Penrose, who knows more than I, although I don't think much of his quantum consciousness mind stuff...too much woo for me.Nonsense. Reality hasn't been rejected at quantum scales.
I think you should acquaint yourself with the experimental results associated with the EPR paper and Bell's inequality. Start here:The claim that reality didn't actually exist for quantum phenomena was argued against most famously by Einstein, with whom I provisionally agree (at some point we have to trust experts). Did he misunderstand?
Criticizing the rejection of objective reality claim, he said: "I like to think the moon is there even if I am not looking at it" - a view towards which I lean, but regardless of any personal inclination, his view of reality appears more clearly consistent with the traditional meaning of reality used in philosophy of science.
Will you share your thoughts?