Thanks for replying, but I'm not entirely sure what you mean by "everythng is actually waves", do you mean everything as in energy?
And how do waves represent those things?
sorry, it takes me a while to get these concepts sometimes
Now that I managed to get enough posts, I'm thinking of making a blog.
Is it okay if I make a few science entries, and a few that aren't really science related, more along the lines of various reviews?
I need a little help understanding how quanta and elementary particles tie in to quantum mechanics. I understand both of them, but it's the concept of quantum mechanics that gets me, it seems really random.
Can someone help explain the concept to me?
I just said it for fun because I happened to know that...don't ask why...
When does any Jedi really sense electricity?
Unless of course we're saying that the Force is really electromagnetic waves/signals,
which actually would explain a lot.
I see your point, but in general, Luke wasn't very smart.
As a precaution he should've worn rubber soled boots, rubber gloves, and a really brilliant thing to have done would be to have magnets in the palms of those gloves.
To deflect the emperors lightning, and to make summoning a lightsaber significantly easier.
Imagine if Luke had brought duel Uzi's and went 'Matrix' on Darth Vader and the Emperor.
He probably could've finished of Vader in 'Empire Strikes Back', and actually killing the Emperor would be very easy, I mean,
Force Lightning vs. two 3.5 kg 470 mm submachine guns...
food for thought, eh?
There is one answer to this whole thing. I'm warning you, it's very vague.
It's very possible for the universe to have expanded faster than the speed of light, but there is no way of knowing for sure.
There's a reason for that, Stephen Hawking and Carl Sagan are NONfiction writers as opposed to hacks who try to incorporate antimatter into their lowgrade thrillers.
I know how you feel.
I've been reading a lot of science books that are above where my science education is, but unfortunatly I haven't really learned anything in math yet that can help me with science.
I don't think that they are singularities,
the amount of gravitational force pulls the space fabric into an inverted cone,
at least that's what I have read.
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