Mr Spinkles
Mr
Anyone who doesn't agree is a nerd. :jam:
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
And why I'm a spanish major. If I'm lucky, I won't have to take physics again. )( Physics is caring why something matters. I really don't. All that matters is that it does happen, and I don't need a physics class to learn that if I drop something it will fall.nutshell said:v=d/t
Who cares! Actually, physics is very important and affects us in ways we're not even aware of, but...Who Cares! I guess I am a nerd (and that's why I'm an English major, not a science major)
Hey Spinks,Mr Spinkles said:Anyone who doesn't agree is a nerd. :jam:
You need a physics class to learn that if you move relative to someone else, time slows down. Without physics, no one would have ever figured out that time dilation does happen. Or that baseballs have a wavelength. Or that the iron atoms in your blood were born in a massive stellar explosion millions of years ago.Aqualung said:Physics is caring why something matters. I really don't. All that matters is that it does happen, and I don't need a physics class to learn that if I drop something it will fall
Who cares that time slows down! And does the fact that I suddenly now know that baseballs have wavelength make me have to change my hitting? Or does the iron in my blood suddenly start acting differently know that I know it, and so I have to make adjustments? Of course not. Sure, physics is good for some people to know, so they can make discoveries. But I have no need for it.Mr Spinkles said:You need a physics class to learn that if you move relative to someone else, time slows down. Without physics, no one would have ever figured out that time dilation does happen. Or that baseballs have a wavelength. Or that the iron atoms in your blood were born in a massive stellar explosion millions of years ago.
Physics is awesome, just admit it.
Who cares that time slows down! And does the fact that I suddenly now know that baseballs have wavelength make me have to change my hitting? Or does the iron in my blood suddenly start acting differently know that I know it, and so I have to make adjustments? Of course not. Sure, physics is good for some people to know, so they can make discoveries. But I have no need for it.
*raises hand*Aqualung said:Who cares that time slows down!
If you were using a tiny baseball and a tiny bat, it might. The catcher might have problems catching the baseball as it diffracts and interferes with itself, and the umpire would have difficulty determining whether or not the ball went through the strike zone.Aqualung said:And does the fact that I suddenly now know that baseballs have wavelength make me have to change my hitting?
Don't be so sure. Experiment has shown that the act of observing a phenomenon affects how it behaves. If you pass photons of light through a double slit, they form a double slit diffraction pattern....but if you start keeping track of which slit the photons went through, they form single slit diffraction patterns. Nature knowns when it's being watched.Aqualung said:Or does the iron in my blood suddenly start acting differently know that I know it, and so I have to make adjustments? Of course not.
To each his/her own.Aqualung said:Sure, physics is good for some people to know, so they can make discoveries. But I have no need for it.
That's right, Dru. Judging by your appreciation for physics, I'm going to go ahead and add you to my list of very very cool people.Dru said:Actually (correct me if I'm wrong, Spinks), knowing something about an object creates a great deal of difference, according to quantum physics.
Good thing we don't then, eh? That's why physics is dumb. Who would ever play baseball with tiny balls and bats?Spinks said:If you were using a tiny baseball and a tiny bat, it might. The catcher might have problems catching the baseball as it diffracts and interferes with itself, and the umpire would have difficulty determining whether or not the ball went through the strike zone.
KnockoutSpinks said:NERD!
Well, druidus, I'm definitely taking you off my list of very very cool people.Spinks said:Judging by your appreciation for physics, I'm going to go ahead and add you to my list of very very cool people.
ah yes, the awesome physics, the same awesome physics in fact that tells us how and why the bumble bee flys ...... oh wait, the bumble bee defies every law of aero-dynamics we have - and yet it still flys! darn, bit of a blow to physics really isn't it!Mr Spinkles said:You need a physics class to learn that if you move relative to someone else, time slows down. Without physics, no one would have ever figured out that time dilation does happen. Or that baseballs have a wavelength. Or that the iron atoms in your blood were born in a massive stellar explosion millions of years ago.
Physics is awesome, just admit it.
Yes they are!C_P said:nah, do philosophy or theology, they are the best subjects in the history of, well, subjects
It would be hard to understand some topics in philosophy without a basic understanding of physics. Especially in the philosophy of science, which is one of the most interesting topics in philosophy, IMHO.Corrupt Priest said:nah, do philosophy or theology, they are the best subjects in the history of, well, subjects
No, they don't defy every law of aerodynamics we have. Urban legend. They can't glide, that's true, but because their wings move in a certain way, they can generates enough lift to fly. It only doesn't work it you assume a bee flies like an airplane.corrupt_preist said:ah yes, the awesome physics, the same awesome physics in fact that tells us how and why the bumble bee flys ...... oh wait, the bumble bee defies every law of aero-dynamics we have - and yet it still flys! darn, bit of a blow to physics really isn't it!