Dear Howard and colleagues,
OK, you can say that quarks communicate, but immediately we need to
create another term for "real" communication. I mean, there are quarks
(fermions) and bosons (particle forces) everywhere: planets, stars,
galaxies, etc. Their multiple interactions constitute most
re: quarks
the big question for FIS is this: do quarks communicate? and can their
communications be called informational?
are quarks more than just the first bits of matter in the cosmos? are
they also the first socializers? the first team-makers?
with oomph--howard
Ho
Hi, Bob.
I like very much your analogies and metaphors.
This is a characteristic of interdisciplinary scholars :-)
Rainer Bromme wrote a very intersting chapter in "Practice
Interdisciplinarity" book about the psychology cognitive of
Interdisciplinarity.
And I agree when he say "The discourse of i
Stan et al - you honour me by asking the question. We know that matter (and
here I do not include dark matter or dark energy) is made up of a small number
of quarks and gluons. As we go higher and higher energy we will continue to
create these "freaks of nature" freaks in the sense that we creat