This thread is only relating to the thesis because you and Glen have appropriated the experiment to another thread. And this, I believe, is to ensure that the experiment is considered an independent discovery bearing no material relationship to the Rosemary Ainslie circuit nor the thesis that required that circuit for proof. And this in defiance of evidence to the contrary.
Temperature is most assuredly referred to in the blogspot as is spin.
I have no idea if this is true. To the best of my knowledge the only copyright on this was secured for me by Peter Lindemann. But I'm open to correction. I always assumed that the thesis was available for open source. But that does not mean that it can be corrupted by open source - I hope. Just don't know that much about copyright generally.
The MMRA is a model or a thesis both terms being interchangeable. It is not a theory as it requires mathematical modelling. I would remind you all that Faraday himself did not do the modelling of the Laws of Induction although perfectly proven and expressed in concept prior to Maxwell's input. That elevated Farraday's thesis to Maxwell's theory.
And while your points in the notes on MMRA are interesting it contains one error. The original model, described in the blogspot - certainly points out the calorific property of the zipon. But what your notes also seem to lack is the reference to this one fact. The zipons are always in a hidden field. Transient imbalances can induce it to enter our dimensions. Effectively the field becomes disturbed. Else all interactions of all particles with the field occur in this hidden dimension. And justification for the particle and the field in which it manifests is based on deductive reasoning which is precisely akin to quantum values ascribed to measurable particles. In other words - the thesis fits the facts.
Thank you for your well wishes. I am sorry they resulted in such an dearth of evidence of so much expressed good will. The most glaring departure is that you have ascribed the experiment to some accidental and fortuitous departure from the Rosemary Ainslie circuit - which has not anywhere been substantiated - and is in defiance of the legal and expert advices to which I have referred - repeatedly.
Originally posted by Harvey
Originally posted by Harvey
The MMRA is a model or a thesis both terms being interchangeable. It is not a theory as it requires mathematical modelling. I would remind you all that Faraday himself did not do the modelling of the Laws of Induction although perfectly proven and expressed in concept prior to Maxwell's input. That elevated Farraday's thesis to Maxwell's theory.
And while your points in the notes on MMRA are interesting it contains one error. The original model, described in the blogspot - certainly points out the calorific property of the zipon. But what your notes also seem to lack is the reference to this one fact. The zipons are always in a hidden field. Transient imbalances can induce it to enter our dimensions. Effectively the field becomes disturbed. Else all interactions of all particles with the field occur in this hidden dimension. And justification for the particle and the field in which it manifests is based on deductive reasoning which is precisely akin to quantum values ascribed to measurable particles. In other words - the thesis fits the facts.
Thank you for your well wishes. I am sorry they resulted in such an dearth of evidence of so much expressed good will. The most glaring departure is that you have ascribed the experiment to some accidental and fortuitous departure from the Rosemary Ainslie circuit - which has not anywhere been substantiated - and is in defiance of the legal and expert advices to which I have referred - repeatedly.
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