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Time Travelers
The shotgun approach.
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<blockquote data-quote="IroncladMarshmallow" data-source="post: 87717" data-attributes="member: 5685"><p>3 days ago I drove to the river to calm my mind. I stood on the river bank watching a deer grazing on a sand bar on the other side of the river, oblivious to my presence. I walked onto a jetty composed of concrete blocks haphazardly piled on one another, extending about 6 meters from shore. I watched for some 9 minutes until the deer disappeared into the forest, having eaten all it wanted of the grass growing there. My attention turned to the water beneath me. I noticed whirlpools would form, travel, and dissipate in seeming random fashion. I then realized that in science, we try to make things so abstract and pretend everything happens in isolation so that an effect must be created from nothing by artificial means. Yet here was a natural vortex former, right beneath my feet. Other fluids exist in nature, some seen and others unseen, and they each flow through a chaotic environment devoid of the abstract sterility which we imagine in the lab. Fluid flow through a natural environment will create vorticity and all other flow types imaginable. One need not create a wormhole in order to use it. Anything that can exist exists already somewhere in nature, whether near or far. By knowing what to look for, we can exploit nature's bounty to our advantage.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="IroncladMarshmallow, post: 87717, member: 5685"] 3 days ago I drove to the river to calm my mind. I stood on the river bank watching a deer grazing on a sand bar on the other side of the river, oblivious to my presence. I walked onto a jetty composed of concrete blocks haphazardly piled on one another, extending about 6 meters from shore. I watched for some 9 minutes until the deer disappeared into the forest, having eaten all it wanted of the grass growing there. My attention turned to the water beneath me. I noticed whirlpools would form, travel, and dissipate in seeming random fashion. I then realized that in science, we try to make things so abstract and pretend everything happens in isolation so that an effect must be created from nothing by artificial means. Yet here was a natural vortex former, right beneath my feet. Other fluids exist in nature, some seen and others unseen, and they each flow through a chaotic environment devoid of the abstract sterility which we imagine in the lab. Fluid flow through a natural environment will create vorticity and all other flow types imaginable. One need not create a wormhole in order to use it. Anything that can exist exists already somewhere in nature, whether near or far. By knowing what to look for, we can exploit nature's bounty to our advantage. [/QUOTE]
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The shotgun approach.
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