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Would a valve work at the dawn of time?
Who would have thought that the answer to the great mystery of the cosmos was staring us in the face all along? I can spell thermionic but not the word that comes before "tube". That's why I stuck with "valve". It's not just patriotism, it's a matter of science. A tube must always be full of something. There's a lot of excitement about the Higgs Bosun. Much more so than with the neutrino anomoly. This looks like a sign, not of what has been proven and what has not, but of what science expects to find. The Higgs fits, the speeding neutrino doesn't. On the face of it the Higgs would be a huge success for materialists. We objected to the idea of empty space from the start, for the obvious reason that it has no material reality. Much more significant could be a great leap forward for the Dialectic. Some professor was on the radio saying that the concept of "supersymmetry" could become virtually unassailable. Everything has it's equal but opposite counterpart. The great thing about supersymmetry is that it elevates opposition to the status of an explaining principle, rather than a phenomenon requiring explanation. Science then has no need to explain why the very large behaves so differently from the very small, because it can simply identify the two realms as opposites. Science itself, if you will, would be expected to comprise two opposite parts. Job done. Now we know everything. To paraphrase Lennin, grasp the Dialectic and you're more than half way there. Matierialsm is the easy part. Who better to answer the Great Question of All Time but the Butcher? Patrick, pack up a couple of valves and your trusty power supply, and take yourself off to the Dawn of Time, please. You'll need a change of clothes perhaps. There's no use supposing, we need a proper experiment. Do valves work without the Higgs Bosun? Ian |