153 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
153 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
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| File Name : GRAVWAVE.ASC | Online Date : 12/26/95 |
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| Contributed by : Jerry Decker | Dir Category : GRAVITY |
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| From : KeelyNet BBS | DataLine : (214) 324-3501 |
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| KeelyNet * PO BOX 870716 * Mesquite, Texas * USA * 75187 |
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| A FREE Alternative Sciences BBS sponsored by Vanguard Sciences |
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| InterNet email keelynet@ix.netcom.com (Jerry Decker) |
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| Files also available at Bill Beaty's http://www.eskimo.com/~billb |
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|----------------------------------------------------------------------------|
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The following file is excerpted from the InterNet.
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From: rex@wolfe.net (Rex Smith)
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Newsgroups: alt.sci.physics.new-theories
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Subject: "gravity waves"
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Date: 20 Dec 1995 08:44:58 GMT
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Organization: Wolfe Internet Access, L.L.C.
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"GRAVITY"
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During the fortnight I was writing this chapter, there came the first public
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reports of the tentative "discovery" of "gravity waves."
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I remind you of the idea, as we have noticed before, that it is amazing that,
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when the need for something is great enough, in this instance "gravity waves,"
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lo and behold we "discover" them. It seems that the "things" we need to have
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to support our theories turn up at just the right time surprisingly often.
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Presumably, "gravity waves" will eventually furnish some answers to the
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questions about the "nature of gravity" that have been present for some time.
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Now I have nothing against the idea of theories per se; they are vitally
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necessary for advancement. My criticism here is to be seen in the context of
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our creations of 'things' to support theories. At any rate, this seems to be
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to be a good example of the idea that:
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A question determines and brings about its answer just as the desired
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end shapes the nature of the kind of question asked. This is the way
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by which science synthetically creates that which it then 'discovers'
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out there in the universe (138, p. 7).
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I am reminded of the Ptolemaic epicycles, (supposed) tremendously complicated
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systems of planetary orbits that were necessary to explain the geocentric
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theory of the solar system. And "explain" it they did, to such an extent that
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for untold generations men of "science" believed implicitly that the sun and
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all the other planets revolved around the earth.
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Of course, this theory was ultimately overborne by Copernicus and his true-to-
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reality idea that the sun is the center of the solar system.
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But during the previous hundreds of years everyone "knew" that the earth was
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the center; it had been copiously "proved" by irrefutable scientific
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reasoning. The need for believing that the earth was the center of the solar
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system preceded the "existence" of epicycles; they were "discovered" to
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"prove" the geocentric theory.
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It is almost axiomatic that anything that one wants to believe strongly enough
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can either be "proved" to him or that he can "prove" it to himself - "When I
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believe it I'll see it."
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So all these years we have not known what gravity IS (58, p. 268) (here's our
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old linguistic pons asinorum again), even though we "know" there's such a
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"thing" as "gravity."
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So the 'climate of the scientific times' demanded that it was about time we
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found out and <20> Presto! <20> "gravity waves" are "discovered." Not that this will
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explain anything, anymore than light waves explain the existence of light, but
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at least it will give us a feeling of finally getting a handle on "gravity."
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You may remember that I summarized (p. xiv, Note 56) Ouspensky's "spiral
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principle," which makes "gravity" unnecessary. Summarizing it in another way,
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it is reasonable to conceive of everything in the universe, material bodies
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(including "elementary particles"), and energy flows, vortexes, etc., in a
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holistic way, as being part of the same "entity."
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It seems reasonable to conceive that the universe, this entity, has one main
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center of activity - the "core" of the Big Bang - around which all its parts
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are congregated in cohesive ways that spring from the nature of the primordial
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fire-ball. By the same token every point of the universe has its own, smaller
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center which binds together even smaller points.
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As far as we know, Sol is revolving around some point in Andromeda, and that
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center is revolving around an even higher center and so on until the "core",
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the Ultimate Center of the universe, is reached.
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Some smaller centers, such as Sol, have planets revolving around them; still
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smaller centers, such as Earth, Mars, Jupiter, etc., have moons revolving
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around them. These latter, in turn, have asteroids, rocks, etc., revolving
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around them.
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On the subatomic level we find much the same case, smaller "bodies" revolving
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around larger ones. (Recall our discussion of all "bodies" being composed of
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"frozen energy-flows"). Bear in mind, however, that "empty spaces," with their
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energy-flows, are also real parts of the universe.
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So "gravity" or whatever the mysterious force that is presumed to "attract"
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bodies to one another is, also has to "attract" each bit of space to other
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bits of space (that is if my above hypothesis is rejected).
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For if the universal energy flows were disorganized or displaced then the
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universe would surely collapse into chaos. So "gravity" then not only has to
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"hold" material bodies in position, but also must "hold" space and energy-
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flows in position!
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I have never come across the idea expressed in the last two sentences, to my
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knowledge, but it seems to me to be a logical step from the common idea of
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"gravity"'s workings with material bodies.
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Further, "gravity waves" presumably travel thru space, as light waves are said
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to do, although I questioned that idea a few chapters ago. Up until now, as
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far as I know, "gravity" has been presumed to he instantaneous in its
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effects., i.e. its effects are everywhere, they never had to get anywhere,
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which would have to involve a lapse of time.
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Because, as we have seen before, it seems to be accepted that gravity, time,
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and space came into existence simultaneously - Bronowski, for one, says that
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gravity is "embedded" in space-time (16, p. 106).
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It would seem to make as much sense to say that space "travels" (and of course
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that possibility cannot be ruled out) as to say that "gravity" does. But if
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we go back to Ouspensky's idea of the universe as one of interconnected
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spirals, there is no need to postulate a force such as "gravity," because all
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"parts" of the universe are welded together, just as all parts of an apple,
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say, are, to restate the main idea of this section.
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Every "part" of the apple is connected to the core, just as every "part" of
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the universe is connected to its core.
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This "discovery of gravity waves" is based on careful measurement of the
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shortened orbital period (four ten-thousandths of a second in four years) of a
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pair of companion stars in Aquila, one of which is a rapidly rotating quasar.
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The velocity of the stars around each other, 600,000 m.p.h., is high enough,
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according to relativity theory, for gravity waves <20> if they exist <20> to have a
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measurable effect; the gravity waves' drawing of energy from the stars would
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theoretically cause their orbits to be shortened.
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Astronomer Joseph Taylor said: "We don't claim to have detected gravitational
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waves themselves, but simply proved they exist" (40). It is this statement
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that I object to. The detection of the change of orbits could just as well be
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"proof" that these two particular stars are slowly spiraling toward their
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common core or center of energy, as per Ouspensky's theory, as "proof" that
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gravity waves exist.
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The difference is - and it is all-impoprtant in our context - that in one case
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the "proof" demands creation of things, and in the other it does not. I
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prefer, on the principle of parsimony and Occam's razor, the explanation that
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does not require the creation of things.
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--
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Rex Smith, PhD - 206 Mt. Park Bd., D-202 - Issaquah, WA 98027
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Ph 206-392-6658
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