Come on you quantum physics guys lets give something a shot, if you would 
not mind indulging me.  I have been meditating on missing Maddy McCann a 
lot, and my lineage is Je Tsong Khappa Malaysian centre.  The Malaysian bird 
little bird was seen in N.E(ire) because I also see the dogstar pointing so. 
Where is the Dogstar prominent now.  like Co.Ordinates the ire could be 
anger  I really could do with more info but ignorance always gets in the 
way.

--------------------------------------------------
From: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2009 11:48 AM
To: "Epistemology" <[email protected]>
Subject: [epistemology 10901] Re: What is the nature of h-bar ?

>
>
> 1.
>     h is Quantum of action.
> 2.
>    h exists because ‘ angular momentum ‘  is quantized..
>      h is not a particle, either.
> 3.
>    h is (h) just a constant of nature.
>     h has no spin, h is just a constant
>   ( h) isn't  the particle. Just one of many characteristics it has.
> 4.
>   h-bar is the Maltese representation of the Arabic letter ha.
>   They also have nouns and verbs in Maltese, but theirs actually
> make
>   sense to speakers of at least one more language than you do.
> 5.
> . . . .
> the inappropriate units of measurement in which
> h-bar is too often expressed, most often
> Joule-seconds or Newton-meters.
> 6.
> Planck's " h" is a quantity of action. Despite the ambiguity
> beloved by present physicists, a quantity is not a particle.
> 7
>  Please excuse me for saying so, dear peasant, but you've
> been sadly misled by your professors. The quantity h is
> not a particle, and it doesn't rotate on its axis
>  /  glird  /
> 7
> Now you are almost completely illicit.
> You certainly haven't got a clue what you are talking about.
> / Tom Davidson
> Richmond, VA /
> ==== .
> #
> There are many opinions about ( h).
> And  we can see that (h ) as ‘ something’ has
> many characteristics.
> Question.
> To whom do the characteristics belong :
> to wave, to Micky Mouse, to Superman . . . .  ?
>
> It is hard to me to understand those people who observe
> and see only one parameter of some object/ subject.
> It reminds me the old story about three blind Indian men
> who studied an elephant. One touched the elephant’s leg
> an said it was a column, another one touching a stomach
> told it was a ball, and the last holding the tail said it was
> a snake. I think the Plank's constant (h ) is a ‘ modern
> scientific elephant ‘ and many experts try to study it
> using the ‘ blind method.’
> === .
> S.
>
> >
> 

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