Good post Danny. ;-)

Dave



-----Original Message-----
From: Danny Ross Lunsford <[email protected]>
To: vortex list <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Nov 1, 2011 4:25 am
Subject: [Vo]:Faith!




My strongest reason for believing that Rossi is on the up and up - plain old 
faith.

1) QCD, the theory of the strong interaction that controls how protons and 
neutrons interact, is a beautiful structure that is just about completely 
useless. Almost nothing can be calculated with it. I don't mean a restricted 
number of things - I mean just about nothing. Not only is it completely sterile 
computationally, it is also absolutely useless as a heuristic phenomenology to 
pave the way forward, the way the London theory of superconductivity paved the 
way for the "real deal" of the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory.

2) Neutrino physics is in complete disarray. The discovery of oscillations and 
the failure to find the Higgs boson (something many of us thought would never 
be found years ago) has thrown even the successful part of the standard model, 
the electroweak sector, into chaos.

3) Even bare QED, the quantum version of electrodynamics, is plagued with 
mathematical ambiguities that caused both Dirac and Feynman to ultimately 
reject it. Despite all the hubris about calculations to 8 decimal places, as a 
theory it is hopelessly flawed by reliance on ambiguous mathematics and poorly 
defined physical concepts. As Dirac said, one ignore a quantity because it is 
small, not because it is infinite!

In other words, the standard model, for all its publicity, is a ramshackle of 
phenomenology that "borrowed" shall we say, its main tools from the theory of 
superconductivity and pushed them way beyond the brink of reasonableness. Even 
the fundamental idea, gauge invariance, does not last past square 1, and one 
must sacrifice it to have a short range force.

Now consider the situation in 1820, when Faraday was working. Almost nothing 
was known about the true nature of light, there was no cooperative theory of 
electricity and magnetism, much less one that united them is a single scheme - 
that would have to wait until 1865. But Faraday forged ahead with his 
experiments. He discovered that a current loop in the presence of a magnet 
experienced a torque - the first clue to their actual relationship. Within a 
decade, people were making electric motors, completely without any real 
understanding of what was going on! Yet that did not stop people from tinkering 
and inventing and moving forward. It was the utility of the phenomenon that 
drove the science, not the other way around! And of course who in his right 
mind would have imagined the key to their relationship was nothing but light 
itself? That had to wait for a epochal genius, Maxwell.

Friends, there are no epochal geniuses around. But we do have limited knowledge 
- a great deal of phenomenology - about the nucleus, and a bandy-legged, 
cross-eyed theory that at least makes up a sort-of consistent whole. The LENR 
researchers of today are like Faraday - Rossi is like the guys who made motors 
(and got rich!) - we wait for the Maxwell to cut the Gordian knot. But for the 
knot to be cut - you first have to believe it is possible. You have to have 
faith!

Did we really think we would go down into the mud again without ever making any 
progress? Did we really imagine it was all over? Here's a brand new phenomenon, 
exactly when one was desperately needed! both in the practical world and in the 
abstract world of pure research. I could not imagine that we would all just 
turn out the lights, turn off our computers, shut down our universities and 
libraries, dismantle their buildings for firewood, and simply return to the 
dark ages. I had faith that some day, something new would happen. I am 
painfully aware of my own limitations, but that is exactly why I'm allowed to 
believe, when the self-satisfied and arrogant skeptic can only stew in his own 
cynicism.

It's faith that tells me, more than 1000 experts and gauges, that this is real.

-drl

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"I write a little. I erase a lot." - Chopin




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