Peron Posted September 16, 2009 Posted September 16, 2009 So here is the question, Light is a EM wave, but a wave is a disturbance, and a disturbance is what something is doing, essentially action. So how can Light be a action? Or am I missing something here?
baxtonduglonn Posted September 16, 2009 Posted September 16, 2009 A wave is a disturbance that propagates through space and time, usually with transference of energy. A mechanical wave is a wave that propagates or travels through a medium due to the restoring forces it produces upon deformation. There also exist waves capable of traveling through a vacuum, including electromagnetic radiation and probably[1] gravitational radiation. Waves travel and transfer energy from one point to another, often with no permanent displacement of the particles of the medium (that is, with little or no associated mass transport); they consist instead of oscillations or vibrations around almost fixed locations. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave
Peron Posted September 16, 2009 Author Posted September 16, 2009 so a wave is a separate entity to matter?
swansont Posted September 16, 2009 Posted September 16, 2009 So here is the question, Light is a EM wave, but a wave is a disturbance, and a disturbance is what something is doing, essentially action.So how can Light be a action? Or am I missing something here? What you're missing is that you are making a semantic argument, and committing the fallacy of equivocation (or a close relative of it). The way light behaves is not affected by the definitions we give the words describing it.
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