Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
Mr. Blodgett,
Here is the issue for me. You have not shown that there is a possibility of risk. So far the models you have used have some sort of flaw in them, which would indicate that the risk is very very very low.
Now if you can show that the models are wrong, that is fine.
Or if you can show where the risk is, that is fine.
But to say that 'there is a possibility and therefore we should stop' does not make sense to me.
If there is the possibility of these 'micro-black holes' and it is high enough a probability that the LHC will create them, then there should be plenty of them that exist in the universe. The energies in super novae are tremendous, as are the cosmic ray energies. If the possible risk is as high as you suggest, then these processes should create observable effects from the processes that already exist. And they should be occurring at existing accelerators as well.
Now the difference between possible and probable is not one that I should have to explain.
13 million children die from preventable causes every year.
Now if I use probabilities the way you do and I make the following comparison,
What is the ratio of known risk here, and known cost vs. your possible risk?
Chance that the LHC will destroy the earth 1/1,000,000 per year of operation (I just made that up and I made it as 1 in a million)
Chance that 13 million children will die each year from preventable causes 1/1
So for one year we have
6,000,000,000 x 1/1,000,000,000 = 600 lives cost on average
13,000,000 x1/1= 13,000,000 lives cost on average
So the cost of children dying of preventable causes every year/ cost of destruction by the LHC is
21,667 which would seem to indicate that even if there is a 1/1,000,000 chance that the LHC will destroy the world each year that there is a much higher moral responsibility to perhaps address other issues.
Now the question is this, where have you demonstrated risk and why if the probability is 1/1,000,000 are there white dwarf stars in the sky?
Seriously if the energies and collisions at the LHC have that high a risk of creating micro-black holes that do not evaporate and they can accrete faster than expected then why are not millions of them created in supernova events, and why then do we see white dwarfs of great age that are in the areas where said supernova events have occurred?
Here is the issue for me. You have not shown that there is a possibility of risk. So far the models you have used have some sort of flaw in them, which would indicate that the risk is very very very low.
Now if you can show that the models are wrong, that is fine.
Or if you can show where the risk is, that is fine.
But to say that 'there is a possibility and therefore we should stop' does not make sense to me.
If there is the possibility of these 'micro-black holes' and it is high enough a probability that the LHC will create them, then there should be plenty of them that exist in the universe. The energies in super novae are tremendous, as are the cosmic ray energies. If the possible risk is as high as you suggest, then these processes should create observable effects from the processes that already exist. And they should be occurring at existing accelerators as well.
Now the difference between possible and probable is not one that I should have to explain.
13 million children die from preventable causes every year.
Now if I use probabilities the way you do and I make the following comparison,
What is the ratio of known risk here, and known cost vs. your possible risk?
Chance that the LHC will destroy the earth 1/1,000,000 per year of operation (I just made that up and I made it as 1 in a million)
Chance that 13 million children will die each year from preventable causes 1/1
So for one year we have
6,000,000,000 x 1/1,000,000,000 = 600 lives cost on average
13,000,000 x1/1= 13,000,000 lives cost on average
So the cost of children dying of preventable causes every year/ cost of destruction by the LHC is
21,667 which would seem to indicate that even if there is a 1/1,000,000 chance that the LHC will destroy the world each year that there is a much higher moral responsibility to perhaps address other issues.
Now the question is this, where have you demonstrated risk and why if the probability is 1/1,000,000 are there white dwarf stars in the sky?
Seriously if the energies and collisions at the LHC have that high a risk of creating micro-black holes that do not evaporate and they can accrete faster than expected then why are not millions of them created in supernova events, and why then do we see white dwarfs of great age that are in the areas where said supernova events have occurred?
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