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Keyword: einstein

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  • God and the particles of doom

    10/25/2009 6:25:32 PM PDT · by delacoert · 44 replies · 1,110+ views
    Get Religion ^ | October 24, 2009
    As we all know, as as numerous stacks of research have shown, only really stupid, illogical, fact-challenged people believe that God played some meaningful role in the creation of heaven and earth. Right?I mean, facts are facts and journalism is all about the facts. Still, I am happy to report that the New York Times ran an essay the other day that opened the currents of science just a bit and showed us the kind of things that linear, logical scientists think about when things go bump in the dark, or when they go bump in the light. This is...
  • Einstein's God

    09/28/2009 9:40:25 AM PDT · by betty boop · 56 replies · 1,620+ views
    September 28, 2009 | Jean F. Drew
    Einstein’s God by Jean F. Drew Albert Einstein (1879 – 1955) — reluctant scientific revolutionary and one of the most prolific theoretical physicists who ever lived — continues to fascinate us as a world-class thinker and important public actor to this day. There has been much speculation regarding his religious views in particular over the course of many decades. Some people nowadays maintain that Einstein was an atheist. Others, a pantheist. His great biographer Abraham Pais (in Subtle Is the Lord, 1982) averred that Einstein’s God was simply the God of Baruch Spinoza ((1632–1677), one of the most influential European...
  • Amazing Video: Does God Exist?

    09/27/2009 3:38:59 PM PDT · by NYer · 46 replies · 3,567+ views
    American Papist ^ | September 27, 2009
    And now for something quasi-serious. A fascinating concept, perfectly executed: Hardly a relative theory. Click here!
  • US cyber security system sparks privacy row (Einstein 3)

    09/10/2009 8:19:24 AM PDT · by markomalley · 2 replies · 333+ views
    Futuregov ^ | 9/7/2009 | Robin Hicks
    A new version of a computer intrusion detection system being developed by the United States Department of Homeland Security has raised concerns from advocacy groups over privacy and the involvement of the National Security Agency (NSA) in the development of the software. The new system, known as Einstein 3, can reportedly read email as well as its original function, to detect malicious software. Civil rights group Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) called on the Obama administration to release information about the legal implications of Einstein 3, which will be rolled out across all government agencies. “While its predecessor merely...
  • The Non-Expanding Universe

    09/07/2009 9:40:54 AM PDT · by BGHater · 22 replies · 1,226+ views
    FQXi ^ | 25 Aug 2009 | Kate Becker
    Time doesn’t exist. The universe isn’t really expanding. And if you want a theory of quantum gravity, look to the man who inspired Einstein, says Julian Barbour. For someone who believes time doesn’t exist, Julian Barbour sure has a head for dates. He remembers exactly when he started to have doubts about time: It was October 18, 1963, and he was reading the newspaper. He spotted an article about the physicist Paul Dirac and his quest for a theory of quantum gravity—a theory linking Einstein’s ideas about gravity to the clashing doctrine of quantum mechanics. Today, Barbour is on that...
  • Privacy Concerns: Is Einstein Listening and Watching You?

    07/05/2009 10:29:14 AM PDT · by luckybogey · 3 replies · 432+ views
    LuckyBogey's Blog ^ | July 5, 2009 | LuckyBogey
    The Obama administration will proceed with a Bush-era plan to use National Security Agency assistance in screening government computer traffic on private-sector networks, with AT&T as the likely test site, according to three current and former government officials. — “We absolutely intend to use the technical resources, the substantial ones, that NSA has. But . . . they will be guided, led and in a sense directed by the people we have at the Department of Homeland Security,” the department’s secretary, Janet Napolitano, told reporters in a discussion about cybersecurity efforts. … The program is the most controversial element of...
  • The Suppression of Inconvenient Facts in Physics

    06/07/2009 7:50:26 PM PDT · by Kevmo · 82 replies · 2,375+ views
    Suppressed Science.Net ^ | 12/06/08 | http://www.suppressedscience.net/
    The Suppression of Inconvenient Facts in Physics "Textbooks present science as a noble search for truth, in which progress depends on questioning established ideas. But for many scientists, this is a cruel myth. They know from bitter experience that disagreeing with the dominant view is dangerous - especially when that view is backed by powerful interest groups. Call it suppression of intellectual dissent. The usual pattern is that someone does research or speaks out in a way that threatens a powerful interest group, typically a government, industry or professional body. As a result, representatives of that group attack the...
  • Heady Theories on the Contours of Einstein's Genius

    05/22/2009 8:57:24 AM PDT · by BGHater · 7 replies · 460+ views
    WSJ ^ | 21 May 2009 | Robert Lee Hotz
    Seeking signs of genius, a researcher recently reconstructed the shape of Albert Einstein's brain with techniques normally used to analyze fossils. This mold of thought, she believes, reveals the imprint of a rare intelligence that transformed our understanding of space, time and energy. By studying photographs of Einstein's brain taken at his death in 1955, paleoanthropologist Dean Falk at Florida State University identified a dozen subtle variations in its surface that may have heightened his ability to see physics in a new way. Her research suggests how the brain shaped the inner life of the 20th century's most famous mind....
  • 13 things that do not make sense

    05/14/2009 2:03:46 PM PDT · by Hawthorn · 36 replies · 1,712+ views
    New Scientist ^ | April 14, 2009 | Michael Brooks
    Don't try this at home. Several times a day, for several days, you induce pain in someone. You control the pain with morphine until the final day of the experiment, when you replace the morphine with saline solution. Guess what? The saline takes the pain away.
  • Science, Spirituality, and Some Mismatched Socks

    05/12/2009 7:22:49 AM PDT · by Squidpup · 11 replies · 1,058+ views
    Wall Street Journal ^ | May 5, 2009 | GAUTAM NAIK
    One of quantum physics' crazier notions is that two particles seem to communicate with each other instantly, even when they're billions of miles apart. Albert Einstein, arguing that nothing travels faster than light, dismissed this as impossible "spooky action at a distance." The great man may have been wrong. A series of recent mind-bending laboratory experiments has given scientists an unprecedented peek behind the quantum veil, confirming that this realm is as mysterious as imagined. Quantum physics is the study of the very small -- atoms, photons and other particles. Unlike the cause-and-effect of our everyday physical world, subatomic particles...
  • Life, the Universe, and Einstein: Shaking up the Cosmos ( 2005 article )

    04/05/2009 10:41:09 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 17 replies · 1,035+ views
    DUKE Magazine ^ | July-August 2005 | Robert J. Bliwise
    In this centennial year of Albert Einstein's revolutionary theories of space, time, and gravity, humanities scholars say that his influence extended far beyond science. Time is a nebulous thing, except maybe for lunchtime. That's a lesson from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the science-fiction romp by Douglas Adams that was thrown into Hollywood's Infinite Improba bility Drive and emerged as an early-summer movie hit. Consider the elaborately imagined history of the Guide itself, and of its various editors. We learn that one Lig Lury Jr., hired by a publishing consortium operating from a chunk of celestial real estate called...
  • 6Yr-Old Indian Boy’s IQ is Greater Than That of Einstein

    03/19/2009 10:33:35 AM PDT · by nickcarraway · 67 replies · 2,809+ views
    Sindh Today ^ | Mar 13th, 2009
    An Indian boy has an IQ greater than that of Albert Einstein at the tender age of six. Pranav Veera has an IQ of 176, while Einstein’s IQ was believed to be about 160. The little boy can recite the names of the U.S. presidents in the order they served in office, and is able to say the alphabet backward. Given a date back to 2000, Pranav can even tell which day of the week that was. He is highly competitive at playing Wii video games, and likes to play outside. Pranav’s parents have revealed that he seemed unusually intelligent...
  • God’s Mighty Expanse (ever wonder what the BIBLE says about COSMOLOGY?)

    02/25/2009 6:52:31 PM PST · by GodGunsGuts · 66 replies · 1,679+ views
    CMI ^ | 26 February 2009 | D. Russell Humphreys, Ph.D.
    God’s mighty expanse by D. Russell HumphreysPublished: 26 February 2009(GMT+10) Psalm 150:1, the first verse of the last psalm, contains a phrase that has always intrigued me: … Praise Him in his mighty expanse. (NAS), or… praise him in the firmament of his power. (KJV) God made the expanse (firmament) on the second day and called it “heavens” (Genesis 1:8, plural from literal Hebrew). Later, on the fourth day, He populated the expanse with the sun, moon and stars (Genesis 1:14-19). So the expanse is not the heavenly bodies, but rather the space that contains the heavenly bodies. Normally people...
  • Five-county region sees relative advantage in Einstein name

    01/12/2009 7:30:21 PM PST · by Coleus · 2 replies · 407+ views
    star ledger ^ | 11.30.08 | Cathy Bugman
    California has Silicon Valley. North Carolina, the Research Triangle. Now some in New Jersey would like the central part of the state branded Einstein's Alley. Trying to capitalize on Albert Einstein's ties to Princeton, where he lived in his last years, a group has launched an aggressive marketing campaign to lure high-tech industries to the five-county region of Somerset, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex and Monmouth. "We want to help the economy in New Jersey," said Lou Wagman, co-executive director of Einstein's Alley, the nonprofit launched two years ago at the suggestion of Rep. Rush Holt (D-12th Dist.). "And we're starting to...
  • Particle Physics Is Remarkably Consistent with Genesis

    12/05/2008 9:02:48 AM PST · by GodGunsGuts · 43 replies · 1,833+ views
    ICR ^ | December 2008 | Brian Thomas, M.S.
    Aided by a supercomputer, an international team of theoretical physicists has recently performed a massive computation that confirmed Einstein’s famous formula E=mc2, which states that matter and energy interconvert. Their research appears in the November 21, 2008, edition of the journal Science. The study set out to provide a stronger theoretical basis for the Standard Model of particle physics. Part of this model holds that the protons and neutrons inside atomic nuclei are made of quarks and gluons, which are theoretical particles of energy. The researchers’ quantitative calculations agreed very closely with the experimental observations that “more than 99 percent...
  • e=mc2: 103 years later, Einstein's proven right

    11/21/2008 6:38:36 PM PST · by camerakid400 · 83 replies · 2,816+ views
    afp ^ | nov 20 08
    PARIS (AFP) — It's taken more than a century, but Einstein's celebrated formula e=mc2 has finally been corroborated, thanks to a heroic computational effort by French, German and Hungarian physicists.
  • Right Again, Einstein

    07/05/2008 5:49:29 PM PDT · by neverdem · 32 replies · 500+ views
    ScienceNOW Daily News ^ | 3 July 2008 | Phil Berardelli
    Enlarge ImageIt's relative. Astronomers have been measuring spin precession in an eclipsing pair of pulsars.Credit: Daniel Cantin/McGill University As if his reputation needed cementing, astronomers have confirmed Albert Einstein's status as a supergenius once more. Studying a unique pair of pulsars--small and extremely dense leftovers from supernova explosions--researchers have measured an effect that was predicted by Einstein's 92-year-old general theory of relativity. The result, they report tomorrow in Science, is almost exactly what the famous physicist had foreseen. In Einstein's relativistic universe, matter curves space and slows down time, and the speed of light remains the only constant. But...
  • Childish superstition: Einstein's letter makes view of religion relatively clear

    05/13/2008 9:08:59 AM PDT · by liberallarry · 62 replies · 530+ views
    The Guardian ^ | May 13, 2008 | James Randerson
    "The word god is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish. No interpretation no matter how subtle can (for me) change this." "For me the Jewish religion like all others is an incarnation of the most childish superstitions. And the Jewish people to whom I gladly belong and with whose mentality I have a deep affinity have no different quality for me than all other people. As far as my experience goes, they are no better than other human groups,...
  • Belief in God 'childish,' Jews not chosen people: Einstein letter

    05/13/2008 5:45:59 AM PDT · by Alex Murphy · 146 replies · 652+ views
    BREITBART ^ | May 13, 2008
    Albert Einstein described belief in God as "childish superstition" and said Jews were not the chosen people, in a letter to be sold in London this week, an auctioneer said Tuesday. The father of relativity, whose previously known views on religion have been more ambivalent and fuelled much discussion, made the comments in response to a philosopher in 1954. As a Jew himself, Einstein said he had a great affinity with Jewish people but said they "have no different quality for me than all other people". "The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of...
  • Childish superstition: Einstein's letter makes view of religion relatively clear

    05/12/2008 6:22:59 PM PDT · by Aristotelian · 63 replies · 1,633+ views
    UK Guardian ^ | May 13 2008 | James Randerson
    "Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind." So said Albert Einstein, and his famous aphorism has been the source of endless debate between believers and non-believers wanting to claim the greatest scientist of the 20th century as their own. A little known letter written by him, however, may help to settle the argument - or at least provoke further controversy about his views. Due to be auctioned this week in London after being in a private collection for more than 50 years, the document leaves no doubt that the theoretical physicist was no supporter of religious beliefs,...