Instead of focusing on those hyperspace things, try to realize the truth: There is no neutrino.
Neutrinos are nearly bugger all in any case - they mostly seem to exist to conserve energy, linear momentum, and angular momentum during beta decay - in other words, they make the sums add up.Instead of focusing on those hyperspace things, try to realize the truth: There is no neutrino.
Don't laugh it's about recognizing patterns and admitting our limited current scientific knowledge.I'm not a great physicist but I always intuitively figure out that (...)
I'm always guessed intuitively (backed by no knowledge or research at all) that (...)![]()
There's always an intuition behind any scientific discovery. Especially if it's ground breaking like the relatively theory or the quantum physics or finding a faster particle than light. You must realize that. Sure I didn't write any book about it and claim it to be the bible truth. I admitted right from to the start to myself that it was only an intuition. You just got the intuition that there's something worth studying there. Do you understand?No. Knowing that every scientific theory is intrinsically subject to improvements is about admitting our limited scientific knowledge, and it's the very idea at the foundation of the scientific method.
Saying that you "intuitively figured it out" that general relativity is wrong ("backed by no knowledge or research at all") is about discarding a scientific theory out of hand because it's too difficult to understand: general relativity is not simply about the speed of light: it's about gravity and the shape of space-time, things you can't simply throw out without any explanation whatsoever.
I don't know what's the problematic here. When you admit that it's an intuition, an hypothesis, then it's ok. Your intuition can be proven right or wrong. That's why I was telling to myself that it was an intuition. An hypothesis. I admitted that it was not backed by proper research.You defy your own reasoning, since there was no "intuition" behind the neutrino speed measurement. They were trying to prove something else, and they found out this weird stuff. They were baffled as anyone else, and that's the reason they released the data to the world, asking the science community to double-check their results, and they are waiting for independent confirmation before making any claim.
Now, there is obviously some modicum of creativity behind any science research (otherwise, it wouldn't be research at all), but it's filtered by years of experience. "Mh, this theory doesn't work very well for this reason, and this reason, and this reason. Now, what if it was like that instead?" As with anything worthwhile, science work is 10% inspiration and 90% perspiration. If you came here last week saying "I intuitively figured out that relativity is wrong", I would have called your idea a piece of moo. Even if this measurement is confirmed, it doesn't make your idea "a precursory stroke of genius": it would still be a piece of moo which just happened to be right. A broken clock can tell you something about being right two times a day, I think.
As with anything, I'm highly sceptical of anything that is presented without a whole lot of supporting arguments and evidences. In this case, I would say that your intuition is mostly a matter of "I can't understand this shit at all. Fuck relativity" instead of a genuine stroke of genius. Call it... an intuition.
It's true I thought about it before, and I'm sure I'm not alone. I'm not here telling people that I'm the only person who thought about that. In fact, I was expecting some "me too".That's not the issue. The theory of relativity is sound and it has been confirmed by countless experiments, and it puts a higher limits on the speed of particles and informations in the universe. It's not just a matter of "going fast", it's about the fabric of spacetime. If we are ever to confirm that neutrinos can travel faster than light, than it's not just a matter of them going very fast: we must find another theory of spacetime, one that allows for such things to happen and yet confirms all the experiments that we made about the speed of light (i.e. it must include GR as a special case, juts like GR includes Newtonian gravity as a special case). And nobody will be happier than me: it means that I am going to see physics advance faster and further in my lifetime. That's wonderful.
It will be a triumph of science, and the people working on it, spending their lives trying to figure out the universe and how it works. This is the reason I'm don't care when someone comes and says "Well, I know nothing about this, but I had an intuition and figured it on my own before anybody else. Not that I have anything to prove it, obviously". I feel that's disrespectful to those who actually worked on it, not to mention quite self-aggrandizing.
No my post as I said it simply a recognition of our limited knowledge. An introduction to abstract thinking.No hard feelings, I just focused on your post because it seemed to present the (unfortunately widespread) idea that people can figure out advanced physics "by guts" instead of relying on mathematics, long hours of study, and hard work. If that wasn't the intention, my bad.
Don't go backward in your thinking. You were on the right path. When you said:Unfortunately, you don't seem to understand the issue about the speed of light, general relativity, and in general what you are talking about. I think I will bow out of this specific discussion, for my own gastritis if nothing else...
I agree with your quote. That's what I mean. I even said it in the posts above a couple of times.If we are ever to confirm that neutrinos can travel faster than light, than it's not just a matter of them going very fast: we must find another theory of spacetime, one that allows for such things to happen and yet confirms all the experiments that we made about the speed of light (i.e. it must include GR as a special case, juts like GR includes Newtonian gravity as a special case). And nobody will be happier than me: it means that I am going to see physics advance faster and further in my lifetime. That's wonderful.
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