What is the most interesting concept?
What is the most interesting concept?
Some think Einstein's theories of Relativity are the most interesting in science, perhaps because they're deemed counterintuitive.
But are they the most interesting?
Is string theory more interesting; or simply untestable clap-trap?
The Big Bang, because it's fundamental?
Or might psychology be the most fascinating of all?
If so, what? Complementary schizmogenesis?
Economics? The Laffer Curve?
What concept interests you more than any other?
Why?
But are they the most interesting?
Is string theory more interesting; or simply untestable clap-trap?
The Big Bang, because it's fundamental?
Or might psychology be the most fascinating of all?
If so, what? Complementary schizmogenesis?
Economics? The Laffer Curve?
What concept interests you more than any other?
Why?
30 character limit on sigline?
Re: What is the most interesting concept?
For me it would be, in no particular order, the concepts of group subconscious and memes, alien control systems, multidimensionality (of reality, and of the individual life), the origin-less nature of the Universe, and the subject of personal evolution.
Why? It's how I'm wired, how I'm caused to be.
Why? It's how I'm wired, how I'm caused to be.
Good Citizen Carl
Re: What is the most interesting concept?
The idea that reality is really real.
- Pincho Paxton
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
I am particulary interested in Colour at the moment. I feel that colour information has a hidden particle, or somehow uses the quark. It's not really a known concept, but I don't think I believe any known concepts at the moment.
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
Have you heard of Goethe's Theory of Colours. I haven't read it, but apparently he wasn't really interested in creating a theory, he was more interested in simply observing the properties of colours.Pincho Paxton wrote:I am particulary interested in Colour at the moment. I feel that colour information has a hidden particle, or somehow uses the quark. It's not really a known concept, but I don't think I believe any known concepts at the moment.
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
I'm more interested in the particles involved in the message. I had electrons playing a big part, and then realised that heat, and electrification should alter the colours of objects, but it doesn't until you totally burn them. So I am thinking.. "What stores the colour information that is not effected by heat or electrification, but also allows the electrons to fluctuate through different energy levels?" And that is probably going to find a new particle, or prove the existence of the quarks.ZenMuadDib wrote:Have you heard of Goethe's Theory of Colours. I haven't read it, but apparently he wasn't really interested in creating a theory, he was more interested in simply observing the properties of colours.Pincho Paxton wrote:I am particulary interested in Colour at the moment. I feel that colour information has a hidden particle, or somehow uses the quark. It's not really a known concept, but I don't think I believe any known concepts at the moment.
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
Yea...Black body radiation, the amount of energy an object can take in....Pincho Paxton wrote:I'm more interested in the particles involved in the message. I had electrons playing a big part, and then realised that heat, and electrification should alter the colours of objects, but it doesn't until you totally burn them. So I am thinking.. "What stores the colour information that is not effected by heat or electrification, but also allows the electrons to fluctuate through different energy levels?" And that is probably going to find a new particle, or prove the existence of the quarks.ZenMuadDib wrote:Have you heard of Goethe's Theory of Colours. I haven't read it, but apparently he wasn't really interested in creating a theory, he was more interested in simply observing the properties of colours.Pincho Paxton wrote:I am particulary interested in Colour at the moment. I feel that colour information has a hidden particle, or somehow uses the quark. It's not really a known concept, but I don't think I believe any known concepts at the moment.
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
Okay, I'm veering from the topic which is what is the most interesting concept.
But since you're talking about color, I have a question which I've thought about for some time and have never found a decent - or really any - explanation, and it concerns colors.
"Color" is what we call what we see when light waves hit our visual sensory apparatus. Two different colors have two different frequencies. In fact, the only difference between red light hitting our eyes and blue light is their electromagnetic frequencies. We see them as different and so have different names for them.
Yet the visible light spectrum is a continuum. Meaning every frequency within a certain range is present. Why then do we "see" distinct bands in the spectrum emitted by a prism?
But since you're talking about color, I have a question which I've thought about for some time and have never found a decent - or really any - explanation, and it concerns colors.
"Color" is what we call what we see when light waves hit our visual sensory apparatus. Two different colors have two different frequencies. In fact, the only difference between red light hitting our eyes and blue light is their electromagnetic frequencies. We see them as different and so have different names for them.
Yet the visible light spectrum is a continuum. Meaning every frequency within a certain range is present. Why then do we "see" distinct bands in the spectrum emitted by a prism?
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
You are just seeing white split up into lots of different outputs. You can drink a cup of tea, and it tastes like tea, but is sugar, tea, water, and milk combined. White is all colours combined, but that is basically a power output of all energy combined for colour. RGB(255,255,255) all levels at max.brokenhead wrote:Okay, I'm veering from the topic which is what is the most interesting concept.
But since you're talking about color, I have a question which I've thought about for some time and have never found a decent - or really any - explanation, and it concerns colors.
"Color" is what we call what we see when light waves hit our visual sensory apparatus. Two different colors have two different frequencies. In fact, the only difference between red light hitting our eyes and blue light is their electromagnetic frequencies. We see them as different and so have different names for them.
Yet the visible light spectrum is a continuum. Meaning every frequency within a certain range is present. Why then do we "see" distinct bands in the spectrum emitted by a prism?
But to look at a blue wall would mean that some energy is missing. Where does the energy go? Why cant you recharge the energy with electricity? Heat? What keeps it stable?
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
"Interesting" seems too subjective a term. The most "important" or "valuable" speaks more to my horrendously masculine perspective. And in terms of science I would have to nominate Bacon's realisation of and argumentation for induction over deduction in empiricism.
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Re: What is the most interesting concept?
No you're not, and that's my question. You should be seeing something that varies continuously because the frquencies vary continuously. But you see a small number of adjacent bands instead.You are just seeing white split up into lots of different outputs