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Thus spake "
Oh No wrote: not the scientists. Pickering is a sociologist, and his book is called a sociological history. Treat it for what it is, and I believe it is a good book. But don't accept scientific and philosophical judgements from someone who is not qualified to make them. Pickering's book is a very well-informed, well researched and scientific analysis of the development of high-energy physics from 1945 to the "GUT" era of the 1980s. Just because he interprets subjective ideas in a way that is different from your preferred way, does not make him wrong. It does not make him right, either. Sometimes the most accurate reviews of a field, and the best new ideas, come from those who stand slightly outside the field, and avoid the academic group-think. Where do you think I stand? We can model a hydrogen atom precisely. Beyond that we are limited to computer solutions, but we do have a very good understanding of atoms. We have a very good understanding at a subatomic scale also, of electrons especially, and not bad of protons and neutrons. Beyond quarks, I think everything is less clear cut. Gluons are accepted, but in my view, before we start building qcd, we really ought to sort out the remaining problems in qed, and the interpretational issues which have plagued quantum theory since its inception. Since you feel more comfortable when bona fide professors of physics are expressing their views, I do not. I feel more comfortable when I am forming my own views based on an understanding of theory and experiment. I think I have reason to claim a better understanding of both than would be expected of a sociologist. here is a little something from Prof. Lee Smolin. "Although I respect my colleagues who disagree, I find their thinking basically incomprehensible. As much as I try to see what they are talking about, I find the assertion that nature is actually a vector in a complex space made up of infinite dimensions as silly as Aristotle's universe of concentric spheres surrounded by heaven with Earth at the center". I share Smolin's view, but came to it independently. My research suggests to me in the most clear terms that the Born interpretation of Psi-squared as a "probability density" was one of the great wrong turns of modern science. There you are wrong. The fact that the squared magnitude of the wave function is a probability density is just about the most empirically solid fact of our era. Indeed, in strict treatments of quantum theory such as those due to Von Neumann and Dirac, only the probability is treated as observed scientific fact; the wave function is regarded as metaphysical. It is found in the mathematical structure of quantum theory, but it is not possible to say that it corresponds to anything in physical reality. It is through studying this approach to quantum theory that I came to the realisation that the same thing applies when the wave function belongs to a photon from a distant star. I believe that we should not be treating this as a classical e.m. wave as is normal in general relativity, but rather as a quantum wave function. Its correct treatment then requires that we first develop a consistent model for quantum theory which applies on a FRW cosmology. The teleconnection is an intrinsic, and I believe essential, part of that model. Ultimately my own reason for certainty that the teleconnection is right is not based on the empirical results of the theory, but on the empirical validity of the postulates, and whatever level of confidence I have that I have not made deductive mistakes. As it turns out, it does lead to different predictions from the standard model in interpreting the red shift of light from stellar objects. As I have been posting here, I have found that these predictions are consistent with observation in so far as I have been able to calculate predictions, and that in certain cases I have consistent predictions where the standard model does not. [Mod. note: again, this thread should return to astrophysics or should go elsewhere -- mjh] Phew, at a pinch I think I just made it. But certainly, the only forum for the main part of this discussion is the one we are seeking to create, sci.physics.foundations. I thank the moderator for being as tolerant as he has been in the absence of such a forum. I think we can continue after the creation of that forum. Regards -- Charles Francis substitute charles for NotI to email |
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