Ben Dhyan
Veteran Member
Sorry for the delay, had tech problems you know.....Um...no, why?
Are you aware of the procedure for approving patents and how little depends on whether it the invention or product works vs. whether it is not infringement, illegal, dangerous, etc?
A popular, sensationalist type book was published in ~2005-2009 on using "zero-point energy" some time in the future. Recent articles I've read (some I stumbled on looking for sources for you or for concise material I could quote that explains things better than I can) have concerned the potential use of zero-point energy.
All you have is a guy whom you misquoted out of context and whose invention failed that you used misleadingly:
The typical description of zero-point energy for you comes from patents? Seriously? That's what you're going with?
Do just read patents as a hobby or is it the Einstein connection that motivates quote-mining patents?
Who do you think gets contracts from NASA, DARPA, the CIA, the NSA, private think-tanks, private militaries, and other government agencies and private companies dealing with proprietary and/or classified information about cutting edge technologies? MIT, Harvard, JHU's APL, etc. When DARPA initiated ARPAnet (the original internet) it was universities that made up most of the internet. The programming language (scripting, technically) that the entire world wide web is based upon? It was developed for academics to share information. Do you know who first produced the method to take MSU readings from satellites to construct a global temperature record? Two scientists at the University of Alabama at Huntsville. They are still under contract with the NOAA to produce these records. The most abstract and probably least applied area in mathematics (i.e., arguably we're not even dealing with the sciences anymore) is number theory. Cryptography in its entirety is number theory.
Basically, the "breakthroughs" you imagine that applied scientists developed came mostly from the "educational orthodoxy" you disdain. The number of PhDs with government contracts who are not, will not, or haven't already held university appointments is tiny.
You misquoted part of it, ripped from context and asked me to interpret it. Then, you declare some sort of triumph because someobody was awarded proprietary status for junk that ended up nowhere and as nothing. Your (mis)quote-mining of patents is supposed to make me think you have the faintest idea of physics, the sciences, or scientific research? What's next? How we should understand quantum physics because of Verizon Fios Quantum?
Actually I read the entire patent in two different forms and looked into the applicants background, just to be sure how seriously I should take the patent in its entirety versus your original misquote taken out-of-context.
I quoted your original question with the original quote above. It wasn't the full-text, but a (mis)quote-mined piece of a paragraph in a patent that you described as a "typical description" of zero-point energy.
I'm not. I just know enough people with contracts requiring clearance (hell, my uncle works for JHU's APL and requires both clearance and special military grade encryption/protection systems (hardware and software) even for his phone. HCII conferences have military personnel every year. I've never done contract work for the government but have for research companies and think-tanks and companies in DC that I am not sure what they do and I don't want to know. Napalm was developed right near my lab.
So you have made claims about lack of credibility of Dr Mead's patent text. Rather than continue to engage in tit for tat general rebuttals, let's examine the science of zpe together in the spirit of learning. I don't mind if parts of my understanding are found to be lacking, I'm about error correction.
So what is your understanding of the science of zpe? For starters, my understanding is that space vacuum zpe is omnipresent and has infinite or approaching infinite energy density.....do you agree with this understanding?