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Exceptions in Scientific Laws?
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<blockquote data-quote="Inferno" data-source="post: 195436" data-attributes="member: 12403"><p>Completely agree that what we have discovered through math is reliable for the most part. I just can't help but feel we are missing some key information.</p><p></p><p>I'm not sure what you mean by this. Are you saying that when something has a very low probability of happening, it holds meaning?</p><p></p><p>I think if time were to stop it would have stopped already. I believe there is some force the keeps us existing and moving forward in the present. If we move the the past or future that then becomes out present, still moving forward at a constant rate.</p><p></p><p>I guess that was a misconception I made. While going through school I found that almost all professors/teachers taught everything as if it were fact. While most information taught in schools is reliable, it still irks me that the only teacher I had that mentioned everything is theory was my high school chemistry teacher.</p><p></p><p>That is really intriguing. I wonder if it would be possible to catch the forces created by spinning an object in that way. I can't really think of ways to use this, but it is interesting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Inferno, post: 195436, member: 12403"] Completely agree that what we have discovered through math is reliable for the most part. I just can't help but feel we are missing some key information. I'm not sure what you mean by this. Are you saying that when something has a very low probability of happening, it holds meaning? I think if time were to stop it would have stopped already. I believe there is some force the keeps us existing and moving forward in the present. If we move the the past or future that then becomes out present, still moving forward at a constant rate. I guess that was a misconception I made. While going through school I found that almost all professors/teachers taught everything as if it were fact. While most information taught in schools is reliable, it still irks me that the only teacher I had that mentioned everything is theory was my high school chemistry teacher. That is really intriguing. I wonder if it would be possible to catch the forces created by spinning an object in that way. I can't really think of ways to use this, but it is interesting. [/QUOTE]
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