--- In [email protected], Duveyoung <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Richard,
> 
> I'm starting to feel like Ronald Regan over here when I say to you,
> "There you go again."
> 
> The Earth is bombarded -- and "bombarded" is exactly the correct 
term
> -- by "cosmic particles and rays."  These things arrive here at 
speeds
> that are so high that the new accelerator you're afraid of is a
> comparatively -- no exaggeration now -- a puny little affair 
indeed.  
> 
> Trillions upon trillions of "stuff-n-bits" bombard our atmosphere
> every second, and most of these collisions are impacts of greater
> "risk" than anything that will happen in the new accelerator -- 
which
> is doing "about one" such "bombardment event" per experiment.  
> 
> The cosmos should have created a new big bang by now, donchatink?
> 
> There isn't a physicist on the planet who will disagree with the 
above.

Sorry edg but they all would, I think it's you that needs to
do a bit more reading on this subject. The stuff that hits
earth wouldn't harm us in any way, usually. The odd big one
gets through, talk to the dinos about that. It certainly
wouldn't cause a big bang. And it wasn't what I was refering to.

What I was refering to was the sort of energy created inside
particle accelerators that hasn't been seen since the big bang.
It really hasn't and we are switching on the biggest this year.
There is a 50 billion to one chance that it will destroy the
universe and create a new one at the same time. Hawking talked
about this partly for amusement and as a thought experiment in
a speech the other day. I don't make this stuff up. I think
it's an intruiging idea, and while it isn't likely (I wouldn't
cancel the pension plan) it is possible. Some people object
to scientists taking chances like this "who gives em the right!"
they say. I say do it, it isn't like it would hurt if it all
goes pear-shaped.

But just reading New Scientist every week is pointless,
you have to get your mental hands dirty. So what did you
think of my idea about life on planets without a carboniferous
period never evolving beyond a primitive culture because of
lack of resources, energy etc? That's my own contribution to
the debate, and it's good I think. Because without fossil
fuels what could we have done?

You won't find it on wikipedia yet, but next time I'm hanging
with my physicist and cosmologist mates I'll lay it on em.
They're all Oxford educated and have kept me up to date on
this stuff for twenty odd years now. I know more about
evolution than all of them put together so I'm not surprised
no one ever came up with it before.

I don't know why you think I don't know what I'm talking about
here, maybe I'm too flippant in my tossing about of ideas.
But I've done a lot of reading on this and it all kind of
hangs about in there, so I never bother with links and stuff,
I just generalise for ease of consumption, maybe that's it.

And I know how science works Edg, it's a process of refinement
and experiment, no absolutes. Just the best guess we can make
given the current knowledge. That's what I like about it.

"There is speculation, there is wild speculation and there is 
cosmology"
 
I can't remember who said it, but it's true.


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