conventional scientific constants are always changing
Posted: Sat Nov 09, 2013 6:30 am
Wonder if you guys have found this before. I never knew that the speed of light, gravity, etc. always changing and varying across times and places.
Banned TED Talk: The Science Delusion - Rupert Sheldrake at TEDx Whitechapel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TerTgDEgUE
Re-uploaded (again, just in case), since TED's Chris Anderson censored Rupert Sheldrake, along with Graham Hancock, and removed this video and Hancock's from the TEDx YouTube channel. They dared question the Scientistic Orthodoxy, and for that they have been publicly castigated and defamed. Follow this link for TED's dubious statement on the matter (and the many comments appropriately critical of TED's rationale):
http://blog.ted.com/2013/03/14/open-for ... sheldrake/
There's 2 parts on why i'm posting this. The one part is regarding these changing constants. The other is regarding the change in speed of "time". If the constants of light, gravity, etc. are always fluctuating. What about time? Wouldn't time then also "go by" at different speeds depending where you are? Of course there's plenty of existing evidence for this that's been done with atomic clocks. But its interesting to discuss this in the light of EVERY known conventional scientific constant having flucutations.
Banned TED Talk: The Science Delusion - Rupert Sheldrake at TEDx Whitechapel
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TerTgDEgUE
Re-uploaded (again, just in case), since TED's Chris Anderson censored Rupert Sheldrake, along with Graham Hancock, and removed this video and Hancock's from the TEDx YouTube channel. They dared question the Scientistic Orthodoxy, and for that they have been publicly castigated and defamed. Follow this link for TED's dubious statement on the matter (and the many comments appropriately critical of TED's rationale):
http://blog.ted.com/2013/03/14/open-for ... sheldrake/
There's 2 parts on why i'm posting this. The one part is regarding these changing constants. The other is regarding the change in speed of "time". If the constants of light, gravity, etc. are always fluctuating. What about time? Wouldn't time then also "go by" at different speeds depending where you are? Of course there's plenty of existing evidence for this that's been done with atomic clocks. But its interesting to discuss this in the light of EVERY known conventional scientific constant having flucutations.