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There's a book called "why does E =MC2?"I commend it to you.http://www.amazon.co.uk/Why-Does-mc2-Should-Care/dp/0306817586(other textbooks are available)
Funny how things unexpectedly shrink away to nothing - Posts, I mean of course []
Quote from: JP on 22/11/2010 23:26:43This question, and a lot of the questions you're asking on the forum, could be easily answered if you read some textbooks on physics or chemistry, or if you were willing to listen to explanations from those who have studied those subjects. However, you don't seem willing to do so.Answered?? ..... certainly not;- Incidentally, I can be insanely enthusiastic, with attention focus a-go-go, but only if the advice has some concrete reasoning, and this is so astoundingly not happening here. [:I]
This question, and a lot of the questions you're asking on the forum, could be easily answered if you read some textbooks on physics or chemistry, or if you were willing to listen to explanations from those who have studied those subjects. However, you don't seem willing to do so.
The question you're asking here can be answered easily, but to get at the "why" of them, you need to understand some basic physics. Unless someone has the time to teach you basic mechanics and relativity over the forum, your best bet to get that competency is to read some books.I've been looking for an excuse to post this for a while, so here's Feynman on why certain things are hard to explain, especially when you lack the fundamentals://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMFPe-DwULM
Quote from: 5nutjob on 23/11/2010 18:21:43Quote from: JP on 22/11/2010 23:26:43This question, and a lot of the questions you're asking on the forum, could be easily answered if you read some textbooks on physics or chemistry, or if you were willing to listen to explanations from those who have studied those subjects. However, you don't seem willing to do so.Answered?? ..... certainly not;- Incidentally, I can be insanely enthusiastic, with attention focus a-go-go, but only if the advice has some concrete reasoning, and this is so astoundingly not happening here. [:I]You're too brilliant to learn from a textbook and yet you consistently get fundamental things wrong in your explanations? The question you're asking here can be answered easily, but to get at the "why" of them, you need to understand some basic physics. Unless someone has the time to teach you basic mechanics and relativity over the forum, your best bet to get that competency is to read some books.I've been looking for an excuse to post this for a while, so here's Feynman on why certain things are hard to explain, especially when you lack the fundamentals:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMFPe-DwUL