On Sat, Oct 26, 2019 at 5:24 PM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

 > *GR is a classical theory, which assumes a classical space-time field.*


General Relativity assumes space and time are continuous and infinitely
divisible, Quantum Mechanics assumes it is not, hence our 2 best physical
theories are incompatible and that makes physicists unhappy.

 > *But if you assume a classical field at the microscopic level, will GR
> give answers which are contradicted by measurements?*


Every time we've tested General Relativity it has easily passed the test,
but nobody has made a measurement at the singularity in the center of a
Black Hole where spacetime is infinitely curved, at that point General
Relativity breaks down and can no longer tell us what's going on.

 John K Clark

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