Unreal Reality at Faster-Than-Light Speeds
Here is a question we are not allowed to ask: If something were to travel faster than the speed of light, what would it look like to us?
Here is a question we are not allowed to ask: If something were to travel faster than the speed of light, what would it look like to us?
Richard Feynman uses an analogy to drive home the everyday-miracle of our perception of the world around us. It is also illustrates how much we can know.
How do you bend a spoon? You can, if you realize that there is no spoon. That there is no space and time.
This is the introductory post on a short series on the rules of the games that people play, and where to look for predictability.
This last post in the series explains why I believe it is time to say goodbye to Einstein, and why I look forward to how our worldview develops in the light of this CERN discovery of material superluminality.
This second post in my series on the superluminality observed (or suspected) at CERN looks at why we cannot accept it.
Richard Feynman on physics and sex. My serious and not-so-serious thoughts on the words of the great man, aptly described as ‘No Ordinary Genius.’