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On Oct 16, 9:16*am, "Chris.B" wrote:
On 13 Okt., 10:35, badastrobuster wrote: Making fun of the inmates of the 19th century lunatic asylums. WHY DO YOU DO IT? Presumably this is not a rhetorical question? The public were protected from the, largely untreatable, inmates of 19th century lunatic asylums. Many were not even lunatics but merely wronged by a religiously corrupted, class ridden, sociopathic, largely uneducated society. One which claimed the moral high ground while sending children down the mines. Performing wars for obscene profit and land theft. Or inflicting their hideous rituals on innocents abroad in the name of god and country. On Abusenet the public is imprisoned in the asylum and the lunatics are mostly outside. Looking in and protected from sanction by their unique anonymity. Anonymity is the curse of the devils who invented Abusenet. In the unforgivably naive expectation that those who used it would be either sane, self-disciplined, intelligent or both. They were wrong on both counts. Nobody sane would put up with the lack of intelligence shown by the resident lunatics. Their infantile drivel is so easily proven wrong that one wonders why they ever bother get out of their institutional beds in the mornings. Burning at the stake still has its merits. No smoke without fire. If that fails there is always the ducking stool. Or, my personal favourite, the sharp, pointy stick of a well aimed, response post. Everybody should have a hobby. That said, lunacy is not officially listed under "1001 fun things to do when you are bored!" A.N.Inmate Being a bit crazy helps cope with the horrific mess this world has gotten itself into. |
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On Oct 13, 2:35*am, badastrobuster wrote:
Making fun of the inmates of the 19th century lunatic asylums. And shortly after you posted that, he wrote a post which began: The most accurate summation of a dismal situation was not written in the last century but in the 19th century by a writer honest and intelligent enough to call it as it is. "To explain: — The Newtonian Gravity — a law of Nature — a law whose existence as such no one out of Bedlam questions ....hmm. If he hadn't passed the Turing Test previously, this would almost have me wondering if he were a 'bot. John Savard |
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On Oct 17, 6:55*am, oriel36 wrote:
Badastrobuster indeed !,the only person ever to design a game where he didn't have to play and he lost !. Ah. So you've seen War Games too. John Savard |
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This is quite impressive - there are over 2000 people in the USA
taking the name of an 'astronomer' with an average salary of $102 000 per year - http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes192011.htm The numbers for Newtonian empiricists is ten times that - http://www.bls.gov/ooh/life-physical...stronomers.htm So,the wage bill in the USA is $21 billion dollars per year and for that you have people who,for the last ten years, cannot reason their way out of the calendar based celestial sphere geometry!. For a few dollars a month in internet charges,people can come here and draw on observations and send them in all sorts of different directions,from evolutionary geology to climate to the historical and technical development of astronomy,my only complaint is that in an era with astonishing graphics I cannot find those people who can adapt the casual style of an unmoderated Usenet posting into new approaches and modifications of older perspectives. |
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On Wednesday, October 17, 2012 5:55:44 AM UTC-7, oriel36 wrote:
I work in astronomy for nothing... Even at that, you are paid too much... http://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphoto...25129148_n.jpg |
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On 17/10/2012 22:11, oriel36 wrote:
This is quite impressive - there are over 2000 people in the USA taking the name of an 'astronomer' with an average salary of $102 000 per year - http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes192011.htm The numbers for Newtonian empiricists is ten times that - http://www.bls.gov/ooh/life-physical...stronomers.htm So,the wage bill in the USA is $21 billion dollars per year and for that you have people who,for the last ten years, cannot reason their way out of the calendar based celestial sphere geometry!. ITYM ignore raving lunatics and netkooks. The Greeks and Romans had a better grasp of celestial mechanics than you do. The Babylonians and even the guys who built Stonehenge probably did as well although they would have had trouble writing it down! The "astronomer" figure is incidentally both misnamed and misclassified by the bls site. They only counted optical astronomers for some reason and completely ignored space probe researchers and radio astronomers. The job category is astrophysicist anyway and there should be a whole bunch of radio astronomers in New Mexico. The pay for astrophysicists is fairly good for an academic position but you can expect to earn at least twice as much in a high tech industry (and the sky is the limit if you sell your soul to Wall Street). The best support engineers that work on the state of the art kit are often better paid than the science researchers too. For a few dollars a month in internet charges,people can come here and draw on observations and send them in all sorts of different directions,from evolutionary geology to climate to the historical and technical development of astronomy,my only complaint is that in an era with astonishing graphics I cannot find those people who can adapt the casual style of an unmoderated Usenet posting into new approaches and modifications of older perspectives. More world salad. I agree that it *is* like poking lunatics in the Victorian asylum to enter into any kind of discourse with you. But I thought it made sense to point out that the bls numbers for what the public might call "astronomers" is probably low by about 500 or so. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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On Oct 18, 12:57*am, Martin Brown
wrote: On 17/10/2012 22:11, oriel36 wrote: This is quite impressive *- there are over 2000 people in the USA taking the name of an 'astronomer' with an average salary of $102 000 per year - http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes192011.htm The numbers for Newtonian empiricists is ten times that - http://www.bls.gov/ooh/life-physical.../physicists-an... So,the wage bill in the USA is $21 billion dollars per year and for that you have people who,for the last ten years, cannot reason their way out of the calendar based celestial sphere geometry!. ITYM ignore raving lunatics and netkooks. I could equally move the topic to issues competence and what have you but things are not always so simple,after all,the colossal annual expenditure on a group that vehemently opposes 24 hour days falling out of sync with daily rotations pales in significance to the damage done to the intellectual currency of our civilization and even our species. On the other hand,I have noticed that empiricists themselves couldn't stand Newton's clockwork solar system in that it limited them in areas such as electromagnetism and even today topics such as geomagnetism arising from internal fluid dynamics is out of bounds insofar as the inability to work with the maximum equatorial speed of the Earth prohibits the necessary distinction between the even rotational gradient of the surface crust with the uneven rotation gradient (differential rotation) of the fluid interior in contact with the surface crust . I noticed that those willing to remain in an unmoderated newsgroup have the advantage over the sterile moderated newsgroups which mirror,in some ways,the empirical hierarchical structure in affirming or rejecting topics based on self preservation in terms of monetary lifestyles and reputations,in short,you know enough to come to saa and discover astronomy goes on here like nowhere else despite the usual racket about its demise. The Greeks and Romans had a better grasp of celestial mechanics than you do. It is absolutely clear now exactly how the timekeeping systems developed and even the Ra/Dec extensions which give empirical 'celestial mechanics' so much trouble as it is a clockwork solar system designed around the calendar system and the 365 day/366 day format.It should take no prompting to push people in the direction of the origins of the calendar cycle which uses a specific reference of the return of a star in order to sync rotations to orbital points as opposed to the mistake of using the daily return of a star to a meridian within the framework of the calendar system. So,'celestial mechanics',in a modern sense, have a definite beginning with an ill-fated conclusion - "... our clocks kept so good a correspondence with the Heavens that I doubt it not but they would prove the revolutions of the Earth to be isochronical... " John Flamsteed to Moore It takes nothing more than to row back to the 24 hour AM/PM system in tandem with the Lat/Long system to gain a foothold in genuine timekeeping and its origins in the Earth's daily and orbital dynamics and only a short step to the original references which create the proportion of full rotations to orbital circuits to the nearest rotation.From that vantage point it becomes easy to see where the numbskulls in the late 17th century jumped the tracks by trying to take a shortcut using daily stellar circumpolar motion and besides,the development of the timekeeping system is a joy to behold and certainly within the grasp of teenagers. This covers the technical aspects to a large extent as it applies to a narrow historical perspective with a much greater tech ical and historical story appearing in the background as to why the predictive side of astronomical timekeeping is getting in the way of interpretative astronomy and especially where planetary dynamics and terrestrial effects mesh.I have seen some decent commentaries that circle this area at a specific juncture in human history - " Two close friends of Galileo, Giovanni Ciampoli and Virginio Cesarini, were also named to important posts. Cesarini was appointed Lord Chamberlain, and Ciampoli Secret Chamberlain and Secretary for the Correspondence with Princes. Under these favourable auspices Galileo thought the moment had come to renew his campaign for Copernicanism, and in 1624 he set off for Rome where he had the rare privilege of being received by the Pope six times in six weeks. Although the 1616 decree of the Index against Copernicus’ De Revolutionibus was not suspended, Galileo felt that he could now argue for the motion of the Earth as long as he avoided declaring that it was the only system that fitted astronomical observations. Here lurked the danger of serious misunderstanding. Maffeo Barberini, while he was a Cardinal, had counselled Galileo to treat Copernicanism as a hypothesis, not as a confirmed truth. But ‘hypothesis’ meant two very different things. On the one hand, astronomers were assumed to deal only with hypotheses, i.e. accounts of the observed motions of the stars and planets that were not claimed to be true. Astronomical theories were mere instruments for calculation and prediction, a view that is often called ‘instrumentalism’. On the other hand, a hypothesis could also be understood as a theory that was not yet proved but was open to eventual confirmation. This was a ‘realist’ position. Galileo thought that Copernicanism was true, and presented it as a hypothesis, i.e. as a provisional idea that was potentially physically true, and he discussed the pros and cons, leaving the issue undecided. This did not correspond to the instrumentalist view of Copernicanism that was held by Maffeo Barberini and others. They thought that Copernicus’ system was a purely instrumental device, and Maffeo Barberini was convinced that it could never be proved. This ambiguity pervaded the whole Galileo Affair." http://www.unav.es/cryf/english/newlightistanbul.html To make a long and very complicated story very short,the vicious strain of empiricism to which you belong owes its existence to the dangers inherent in extending the predictive convenience of celestial sphere geometry too far and the productive strain of empiricism would emerge from recognizing the limitations of the predictive convenience that your predecessors for centuries never did and who lived awkwardly with fudge that associates celestial sphere motion with planetary dynamics. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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On Oct 18, 12:57*am, Martin Brown
wrote: But I thought it made sense to point out that the bls numbers for what the public might call "astronomers" is probably low by about 500 or so. -- Regards, Martin Brown The public are astronomers,that is the whole point of the exercise as their bodies respond to the great planetary cycles by which they sleep/ rise or when they adapt to the seasons as the Earth makes a circuit of the Sun.You come from a community with a doctrine that rotations fall out of step with 24 hour days without knowing the timekeeping principles and the references which keep rotations and days in step while getting large sums of money from the same public so you can take the name of 'astronomer' with all its noble connotations in public stature and intelligence. The story of how the calendar system came into existence followed by the 24 hour AM/PM cycle in tandem with the Lat/Long system is a genuinely lovely story that is within the grasp of any teenager through meteorological events such as the flooding of the Nile and the coincident appearance of Sirius or the enjoyable story of the Longitude problem and how watches resolved the issue as a means,in a wider context, to put days/years in sync with rotations/orbital circuits. In many situations like this,construction goes along with demolition so it is not a matter of disproving something for its own sake but rather that the productive topics become obvious with familiarity as the correct principles and insights become obvious and make no mistake about this,despite the billions poured in the direction of welfare empiricism where you don't actually have to do anything worthwhile,genuine astronomers with talent will surface and move astronomy on to a stable narrative foundation. If you are going to be paid a magnificent salary from being an astronomer then act like one. |
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![]() Oriel36 clearly has serious mental health issues and I would have thought that simple human compassion might dictate to readers and posters alike that responding to his delusions was harmful. If he was 100% igonored then there is at least some chance that he will accept the help he so clearly needs. |
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On Oct 20, 1:43*am, Martin Nicholson
wrote: Oriel36 clearly has serious mental health issues and I would have thought that simple human compassion might dictate to readers and posters alike that responding to his delusions was harmful. If he was 100% igonored then there is at least some chance that he will accept the help he so clearly needs. You are fine and demonstrate the great temporary success of the empirical cult in that an amateur astronomer is supposed to contribute to variable star observing among other things,in other words,theorists who turn the celestial arena into a junkyard are now throwing magnification guys a bone by calling them 'citizen scientists' and keeping them distracted with trivial nonsense - http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/ke...epler-ph1.html It has all the substance of a North Korean memo and the beauty of it all is the wider population get to fund it.'Citizen scientist' indeed !. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Oriel36 - I am very disappointed! | ukastronomy | Amateur Astronomy | 59 | November 12th 08 09:54 PM |
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