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InfoPhysics · Information Physics

Group Information

  • Members: 157
  • Category: Physics
  • Founded: Jan 25, 2002
  • Language: English
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Description

In the objective information view, we do not allow human ideals to enhance the exhibited information of nature. We do not make postulates or other assumptions. We use Occham's razor to find the simplest model of nature as can be mechanically determined. It is free of theory.

Understanding the Nature of Information and The Information of Nature is our goal in this group applying modern physics, Shannon's Information Theory, Systems Theory, and an information systems model to our world we can unify quantum electrodynamics and general relativity in a model of everything. This group supports the website http://InformationPhysics.com

We find that much that we think we do not know, we know, and much that we think we know, we do not know. This new objectivity can be important to science, and to humanity, that we are not misled by false beliefs.

- Jim Whitescarver

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Re: [Cosmology_and_Astrophysics] Re: quantum
I'll butt in again. Einstein showed that there is no such thing as an independent magnetic force. He showed how relative perception of the electric force
Posted - Fri Nov 6, 2009 5:16 am
Jim Whitescarver
jimscarver
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Re: [Cosmology_and_Astrophysics] Universe & Superconductor similarit
David, I envy your knowledge, but at the same time, knowing too much can be confounding and delusional. To keep things simple, supercooling forces up and down
Posted - Fri Nov 6, 2009 4:52 am
Jim Whitescarver
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Re: [specialrelativity] Re: Science and Religion: Is there a conflic
Objectivity of the observer is vital to the understanding of this duality. I don't think there is a grasp of this on the other side of the conversation. ...
Posted - Thu Nov 5, 2009 7:11 pm
ghost_hunter_01@...
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Re: [specialrelativity] Re: Science and Religion: Is there a conflic
Velocity is always change in velocity over change in time period. Nobody is proposing any other definition to my knowledge. I will explain this one more time
Posted - Thu Nov 5, 2009 3:14 pm
Jim Whitescarver
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Re: [specialrelativity] Re: [InfoPhysics] does special relativity ob
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 9:01 PM, john heath <id2143@...> wrote: ... That was my point, an I am happy at leadt one person got it. ... I agree Newtonian
Posted - Wed Nov 4, 2009 3:01 am
Jim Whitescarver
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Message History

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
2009 78 64 27 56 84 165 105 38 19 94 14
2008 38 56 106 108 53 17 75 62 62 71 99 77
2007 67 48 54 62 58 44 23 45 54 81 41 49
2006 38 28 48 15 6 4 4 7 48 44 80
2005 197 454 244 523 209 221 220 126 24 7 20 27
2004 93 60 148 132 273 235 444 90 25 50 94 39
2003 2 10 24 25 41 13 46 17 38 59 110 77
2002 8 19 24 6 15 29 14 10 8 14 41 13
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