On Sun, Jan 8, 2012 at 2:09 AM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:

> In our everyday world of illusion, a miracle is a highly improbable event.
> But in the real world of quantum mechanics (QM), if it can happen, it will
> happen, but just not very often.
>

That is a sense of the word "miracle" that is very different from the sense
in which I am using it when I cast a jaundiced eye at positing "two
miracles" in energy production.

What I am talking about is the political economic miracle of an energy
revolution.  What we are being asked to believe here is that there is
nothing in common between two revolutionary, non-polluting, virtually
renewable, low capital investment energy production systems that both
require hydrogen saturated metals (other than, of course, the fact that
they both involve metals saturated with hydrogen).  We're supposed to
believe it is unreasonable to suspect such commonality because there are
differences in the isotopes of hydrogen used in the two systems.

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