Very naive examples. There were no laws or mathematical relations showing that this was wrong.Ralwyth wrote:Didn't we say that going past 50 mph was impossible, when automobiles first became popular, because at 50 mph, you're lungs would explode?
We were wrong.
Didn't we say that man would never break the sound barrier?
We were wrong.
Didn't we say we'd never split an atom, that atoms were, infact the most basic building block and nothing smaller exsisted?
We were wrong.
If quantum theory is true -- and it seems like it, as we are just using it now, it is mathematically impossible, yes.So, can you say that we will never be able to accurately predict Radioactive Decay, can you prove it? Even if you think you can, People have "proven" Lots of things, but they have also been wrong.
I will stop this discussion now because, as it seems, you have not the knowledge and understanding required to discuss this matter.
I do not care what you are studying, in fact it does not matter in any sense. We are not talking about design, this is again a religious element, but about quantum theory. The only difference between us is:The primary difference between you and me is that you believe that some things are impossible, I do not. You see a world that has been formed by chance, I see a world that has been designed. I am, in addition to linguistics, also a student of applied math/computer science (only as minors now, I plan to take a course on it on my next spin through college)
I know quantum theory, because I played with it for several years now.
You do not know it but make assumptions and claims. These claims are useless for me, as you have no data backing that up or mathematical relations that show that you are right. You don't even have analogies that help anything.
In this case it seems it was me who was not able to explain, however I won't try it again. We're not lacking the tools, we lack the reality that allows it.When you look at radioactive decay (which I honestly can't suggest, it's killer on your sinuses.) You may say, "I will never be able to predict the decay phase of that." I say, "I can't predict that yet, I lack the tools."
You don't know anything about it and just adopt Einsteins point of view, which is foolish in that particular case.I do not believe in randomimity, God does not play dice.
Not knowing details about things and making claims about them is rather <fillinawordthatfits>.
Martin