Hellbound
Merchant of Doom
Black holes.
LOL
No, we still can't make black holes yet, but that won't be true for much longer
Unless they've already finished the new accelerator...
Black holes.
Fairly new? The Urey/Miller experiment that first created amino acids from non-life was done in 1952! The progress toward creating life in a lab since then? As far I can tell, zero.Because we can't produce lightning in a lab (not anything close to the real thing), and especially not at 100 times a second, with a planet-full of material to work with.
We have produced organic compounds, and some of the precursers to life. But considering the research in this area is fairly new, no, I haven't wondered that we can't create it in a lab.
I wasn't the one who thought the odds of ten people on an elevator getting off on different floors was 1 in 10 billion, rather than the true odds of about 1 in 2800.That's pretty much a non-argument.
Have you ever wondered why we can't make a supernova in the lab? Well, astronomy must be wrong.
Have you ever wondered why we can't make a black hole in the lab? Well, psychics is out.
Have you ever wondered why we can't make an earthquake in the lab? So much for geology.
Have you ever wondered why we can't make a volcano in the lab? So much for vulcanology.
Have you ever wondered why you can't actually make a logical argument, but can only insinuate that others are wrong, while providing no countering facts or evidence? Well, you don't think clearly.
Your knowledge of probability?Note for Readers: One of the things in this list is not like the others...can you spot which one?
You mean like another 54 years? (the time since the Urey/Miller experiment)Watch this space.
....but hang around for a while.![]()
But Fort Ticonderoga is a fairly important place in US history. It is quite unlikely that you had gone much of your life without hearing it, but quite likely that you either glossed over it or forgot it since it had no significance for you. (Lots of history is like that for me.) Only when it became significant to you did you start to pick up on the word when you heard it.
I work in data entry and every record I process has a serial number, and I'm often surprised at the number of coincidences I go through in a single day, such as the same three figures cropping up in different records, or having a day in which a get several records ending with three figures the same.
I'm sure if I was numerologically minded I could use this to convince myself I'm special and that I know more than other people.
Any thoughts?
-Andrew
Any thoughts?
-Andrew
Another coincidence: we share the same name!I was gonna say something like this.
[snip]
-Andrew
Apparently, quantum interactions are probabilistic, not random, and the outcome of quantum experiments are entirely predictable.And then if you're taking into account all variables, you get to the level of molecules, and atoms, and subatomic quantum messiness which as far as anyone can tell is actually, genuinely random.
Apparently, quantum interactions are probabilistic, not random,
and the outcome of quantum experiments are entirely predictable.
Then again, I've heard it said that quantum theory allows you to jump through walls. It's just that the chance of this happening is so vanishingly small that it is virtually zero.
Fairly new? The Urey/Miller experiment that first created amino acids from non-life was done in 1952! The progress toward creating life in a lab since then? As far I can tell, zero.
I wasn't the one who thought the odds of ten people on an elevator getting off on different floors was 1 in 10 billion, rather than the true odds of about 1 in 2800.
Your knowledge of probability?
You mean like another 54 years? (the time since the Urey/Miller experiment)
If, for instance, the floors are all owned by separate companies working in customer service, they may each have a policy of stageered lunchbreaks, which would increase the likelihood of such an event.Again, that analysis assumes that all floors are equal. They may not be. People's reasons for being on the lift at that time may cause patterns.
Hans
At the time the results of the Urey/Miller experiment were published in 1953, many scientists thought that the actual creation of life in a laboratory was just around the corner. A tremendous of research has been done in this area, but the ball doesn't seem to have been moved forward at all. Contrast that with what has happened in other areas, such as computers and space technology. For example, in 1953 mankind was still four years away from launching a small artificial satellite into space.Which pretty much shows how little you know about the area. There's been a bit of research into various theories, including the clay structures idea, for one. However, testing is difficult and time-consuming.
So why did you state: "And, oddly enough, the chances of one per floor are the same as the chances of everyone getting off at 10, or of 3 getting off at 2, 4 getting off at 6, and the rest at 10."And neither was I, that was a tongue-in-check example to show how often people misunderstand probability, and apply greater signifigance to events because of this. I explained that several times, but I keep forgetting you can only read things that support your opinion, and ignore everything else.
What you seem to be missing is that, while a lab has some disadvantages over random natural processes, it also has significant advantages. For example, experimenters are free to try and create life from non-life with high-tech equipment in a manner that makes it far easier to create the building blocks of life than it actually was on the primitive earth. In fact, most scientists now believe that the Urey/Miller experiment did not accurately simulate the primitive earth.If we get it done in that time, I'll be impressed.
It took millions of years the first time, on Earth, at an experimental rate within a few orders of magnitude of 3.15x108. Yet you expect us to do it in a lab, where we can't entirely replicate the conditions (we can't produce the voltage and current of actual lightning, for example), where the experimental rate, at best, is one-billionth the natural rate when the event(s) occured, in one two hundred thousanth of the time?
While we're talking of understanding, how are you with fractions? Apparently not very good...
Is this a hit and run or have you changed your mind about not being interested in discussing synchronicity?I think that everything said in this thread so far by skeptics is entirely irrelevant. Of course people see patterns and significance in events which are in fact wholly coincidental. This however gives no evidence against the idea that some apparent coincidences are not in fact coincidences. In other words that the events in question are brought about by anomalous means.